Tuesday, April 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Pilot reported equipment failed before fatal crash

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jul, 2020 09:15 PM
  • Pilot reported equipment failed before fatal crash

The pilot of a small, privately owned plane reported an equipment failure before it crashed on Gabriola Island, B.C., killing all three people on board.

A report published Monday by the Transportation Safety Board says the pilot was communicating with a controller at Victoria's airport when he said he "just had a fail."

The twin-engine Piper Aerostar went down on Dec. 10, 2019, at the end of a two-day journey from Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, to Nanaimo, B.C.

The board says its investigation was unable to determine who was flying the plane, since both people seated in the front held valid pilot licenses.

But it notes the lack of external visual cues in overcast skies, loss of instruments and the onset of acute stress are all factors that increase the risk of spatial disorientation among pilots.

The report says the pilot acknowledged instructions from the controller and momentarily lined up with a runway landing system, but the aircraft continued turning, climbing and then losing altitude.

At that point, it says the pilot reported the aircraft had lost its attitude indicator, which shows the plane's orientation or pitch relative to the horizon.

The report says the controller provided the pilot with a heading and instructed him to gain altitude if possible, but the pilot did not acknowledge that message.

The last encoded radar return for the plane was less than one minute later.

At the time of the crash, the BC Coroners Service confirmed that the three people killed were from the Vancouver Island communities of Mill Bay and Ladysmith.

MORE National ARTICLES

Police aid sought after tourists descend on Gaspe

Police aid sought after tourists descend on Gaspe
A member of the Quebec legislature representing the popular tourist region of Gaspe is calling on the province to send police and money to help locals deal with rowdy vacationers.

Police aid sought after tourists descend on Gaspe

Senator urges Ottawa to fund Canadian vaccine

Senator urges Ottawa to fund Canadian vaccine
An Alberta senator is urging Ottawa to fund a Canadian company so it can develop a domestic COVID-19 vaccine to lessen the risk Canadians will have wait in a line on a foreign-made pandemic cure.

Senator urges Ottawa to fund Canadian vaccine

Canada easing border rules for U.S. students

Canada easing border rules for U.S. students
The federal government appears to have relaxed restrictions at the Canada-U.S. border that would have made it impossible for first-year university students from the United States to enter the country.

Canada easing border rules for U.S. students

Trudeau to testify on WE affair Thursday

Trudeau to testify on WE affair Thursday
The federal government agreed to pay no more than $543.5 million as part of a deal to have the WE organization run a student-volunteer program that was budgeted to spend hundreds of millions more.

Trudeau to testify on WE affair Thursday

Activists to rally in Halifax for public inquiry

Activists to rally in Halifax for public inquiry
People are gathering at a Halifax park today to demand a public inquiry into the Nova Scotia mass shootings.

Activists to rally in Halifax for public inquiry

Several hurt in latest crash near Pemberton, B.C.

Several hurt in latest crash near Pemberton, B.C.
For the third time in one month police have been called to a serious crash along Highway 99 near Pemberton, B.C.

Several hurt in latest crash near Pemberton, B.C.