Crash location | 41.143333°N, 85.154444°W |
Nearest city | Fort Wayne, IN
41.130604°N, 85.128860°W 1.6 miles away |
Tail number | N4185L |
---|---|
Accident date | 18 Nov 2006 |
Aircraft type | Piper PA-46-500TP |
Additional details: | None |
HISTORY OF FLIGHT
On November 18, 2006, about 1100 eastern standard time, a Piper PA-46-500TP N4185L, piloted by a private pilot, sustained minor damage when the nose gear collapsed during landing on runway 5 (3,110 feet by 100 feet, asphalt) at the Smith Field Airport (SMD), near Fort Wayne, Indiana. The personal flight was operating under 14 CFR Part 91. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed at the time of the accident. An instrument flight plan was on file and was activated. The pilot reported no injuries. The flight originated from the Monroe County Airport (BMG), near Bloomington, Indiana, about 1000 and was destined for SMD.
The pilot stated:
At approximately [1000] on Saturday, November 18, 2006, I took off
from Bloomington, Indiana Airport (BGM). Upon take-off, I put the
gear lever in the up position. The landing gear circuit breaker popped.
I put the gear lever back in the down position and reset the landing
gear circuit breaker. Once this was set, I positioned the landing gear
handle in the up position. The landing gear seemed to retract with
no problem.
At approximately [1100], I landed at the Smithfield Fort Wayne Airport
(SMD). It was a normal visual landing. Due to the problems with
retracting the gear after take-off, I paid particularly close attention to
the gear being extended in preparation for landing. I got three green
lights, and did not notice anything unusual regarding the extension of
the gear. The two rear wheels touched first, and then the nose gear
touched down. Upon the nose wheel gear touching down, the aircraft
took an immediate left. Whereupon I applied full right rudder. The
aircraft did not respond. It left the runway into the sod on the left side
of the runway which was muddy due to recent rain. At that point, the
front nose gear collapsed and the prop struck the ground. The aircraft
then came to a complete stop. I shut down all the systems, pulled the
fuel control knob to the off position, and evacuated the aircraft.
PERSONNEL INFORMATION
The pilot held a commercial pilot certificate with single-engine land and instrument airplane ratings. The pilot certificate indicated he held private pilot privileges with a rotorcraft helicopter rating and sport pilot privileges with a powered parachute land rating. The pilot held a second-class medical certificate, with a limitation for corrective lenses. The pilot reported that he had accumulated a total of 4,672 flight hours of which 1,128.5 hours were accumulated in the same make and model as the accident airplane. In the 90 days preceding the accident, the pilot had accumulated 40 hours in the same make and model as the accident. The pilot's most recent flight review was accomplished on November 15, 2006, in the accident airplane.
AIRCRAFT INFORMATION
N4185L, a 2000 model year, PA-46-500TP, serial number 4697025, was an all-metal airplane with semimonocoque fuselage and empennage construction. A 500-horsepower Pratt and Whitney Canada PT6A-42A turbopropeller engine, serial number PCE-RM0028, powered the airplane. The pilot reported that the last annual inspection was conducted on November 14, 2006. A logbook endorsement showed that the airplane Hobbs meter and total time was 1,110.5 hours and that the engine mount inspection indicated in Service Bulletin (SB) 1154A was complied with. The pilot reported the airplane's total time at the time of the accident was 1,128.5 hours.
The airplane's flight manual description of the landing gear, in part, stated:
The aircraft is equipped with hydraulically operated, fully retractable,
tricycle landing gear.
Locking-type actuators are used for main and nose gears. The actuator
assembly provides mechanical gear-down locking at the fully extended
position and is hydraulically unlocked. The actuator also acts as the
gear brace in the extended position.
SB 1154A, in part, stated:
1. Remove the nose gear hydraulic actuator and the nose gear assembly
from the engine mount per the Aircraft Maintenance Manual,
Chapter 32-20-00. Clean the engine mount actuator attach feet area
including tube welds ... . Clean the inboard sides of the mount
within 2 inches of the nose gear attach points ... .
2. Strip the area to be inspected using a commercially available
chemical paint stripper, such as Cee-Bee E-2012 or E-2060 paint
stripper or an equivalent, taking care only to remove paint and primer
from the inspection area or remove the Dinitrol AV8, if the paint was
previously removed and covered with Dinitrol AV8.
3. Visually inspect the engine mount welds and the tubes ... for cracks.
4. Perform a 'liquid penetrant inspection' of the engine mount in specified
areas for cracks per AC 43.13-1B, Change 1, Chapter 5, Section 5.
5. Inspect the entire length of each weld on the attach feet. A mirror will
be required to inspect the upper surface of the attach feet and associated
tubes. If a crack appears, the engine mount must be replaced before
further flight ... .
6. If no cracks are found, clean the feet and apply Dinitrol AV8, Piper
P/N [part number] 89500-800, to the area where paint was removed. If
cracks are found, refer to PART II of this service bulletin.
...
8. Make an appropriate logbook entry of compliance with this Service
Bulletin for each repetitive inspection.
METEOROLOGICAL INFORMATION
At 1054, the reported weather at the Fort Wayne International Airport, near Fort Wayne, Indiana, was: Wind 350 degrees at 3 knots: visibility 6 statute miles; sky condition overcast 3,000 feet.
WRECKAGE AND IMPACT INFORMATION
The airplane was recovered to a hangar at a fixed base operator (FBO) at SMD. Pictures revealed that the right nose landing gear actuator attachment foot had separated from the engine mount. Pictures showed that the tubes and welds that were attached to the actuator attach feet were stripped of paint. The tubes within two inches of the nose gear attach points were painted. The airplane's Hobbs meter indicated 1,131.0 hours at the FBO. The airplane's engine mount was shipped to the manufacturer and was reviewed with four similar engine mounts from other airplane accidents and incidents under the supervision of a National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) structural engineer. The NTSB report numbers for the other accidents and incidents were DEN07LA030, MIA07LA038, SEA07IA058, and LAX05LA116.
TESTS AND RESEARCH
On March 21, 2007, the NTSB structural engineer examined the engine mounts at the Piper Aircraft Inc. facilities in Vero Beach, Florida. Three mounts were bent near the nose gear actuator attach feet, and no cracks were noted. Two mounts, including this incident's mount, displayed separations at the nose gear actuator attach feet. This incident's mount was sent to the NTSB Materials Laboratory for further examination.
A NTSB materials research engineer examined the mount and produced Materials Laboratory Factual Report number 07-113. The report, in part, stated:
The engine mount is generally of a welded tubular construction. The
aft end of the nose landing gear actuator is bolted between two
attachment feet (left and right) at the aft end of the engine mount
structure. The right attachment foot was fractured, and the two tubes
supporting the left attachment foot were bent, with the left
attachment foot rotated aft and up by an angle of approximately
45 degrees. The nose gear actuator attachment bolt was bent at an
angle of between 5 and 10 degrees.
...
The upper aft part of the right nose gear actuator attachment foot
fractured away from the rest of the engine mount. ... The fracture
at the forward edge of the foot showed relatively smooth features
on flat planes with curved crack arrest markings consistent with
fatigue cracking. The fatigue cracking initiated on multiple planes
within the weld between the forward support tube and the right
attachment foot. The fatigue cracking was evident over an arc of
approximately 75 degrees; at its deepest penetration, the fatigue
crack had propagated through approximately 80 percent of the
estimated 0.07-inch wall thickness of the foot. Along the bottom
of the attachment foot, the fracture passed through the wall of the
attachment foot (generally along a weld within the attachment foot
itself) and through the wall of the bottom support tube. No cracks
were observed in the joint where the left attachment foot was joined
to the support tubes.
ADDITIONAL DATA/INFORMATION
On March 28, 2007, Piper issued SB 1154B, Engine Mount Inspection. According to the SB details, SB 1154B superseded SB 1154A and SB 1154. SB 1154B shortened the repetitive inspection requirement for the engine mount from 100 hours to 50 hours. The SB stated that Piper has developed corrective action to eliminate the on-going inspection of the mount. A new mount with improved service life has been developed, P/N 102460-036. The original mount will no longer be available as a service part replacement. If the original mount P/N 102460-002 is replaced with the new mount, the repetitive inspection will no longer be applicable.
The new engine mount, P/N 102460-036, incorporated a one-piece design at the actuator attach point, eliminating the original two-piece actuator attachment feet design.
The fatigue failure/separation of the engine mount's nose gear actuator attachment foot, and the manufacturer's inadequate engine mount/nose gear actuator attachment design.