Saturday, December 27, 2025
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

Federal Child-Care Cash Linked To Daycare Fee Drop In Some Cities, Study Says

Federal Child-Care Cash Linked To Daycare Fee Drop In Some Cities, Study Says
A new report says federal spending on child care has eased costs in a handful of cities countrywide when the cash was used to reduce fees.

Federal Child-Care Cash Linked To Daycare Fee Drop In Some Cities, Study Says

Canada Grapples With Trump's Ban On Travel From Europe Amid Border Questions

Canada Grapples With Trump's Ban On Travel From Europe Amid Border Questions
The Trudeau government, provincial premiers and Canadian business leaders awoke Thursday morning to address the fallout for Canada of President Donald Trump's decision to slam America's door shut to most foreign nationals who were recently in Europe.

Canada Grapples With Trump's Ban On Travel From Europe Amid Border Questions

Immigration Legal Clinic Offers Support For B.C. Newcomers

Immigration Legal Clinic Offers Support For B.C. Newcomers
B.C.’s largest immigrant-serving agency will host a legal clinic to provide improved support for new British Columbians as part of government's commitment to increase access to justice.

Immigration Legal Clinic Offers Support For B.C. Newcomers

Juno Awards In Saskatoon Cancelled Last-minute Over COVID-19 Concerns

The Juno Awards have been cancelled over concerns about the COVID-19 outbreak — a move one music publicist says was the right decision but is also a "devastating" blow to the industry.

Juno Awards In Saskatoon Cancelled Last-minute Over COVID-19 Concerns

'Social Distancing' Ramps Up As COVID-19 Spreads And Economic Toll Mounts

Keeping distance from others as a way to prevent the further spread of COVID-19 ramped up across Canada on Thursday as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his wife went into self-isolation

'Social Distancing' Ramps Up As COVID-19 Spreads And Economic Toll Mounts

Saskatchewan Announces First Presumptive Case Of COVID-19

Saskatchewan Announces First Presumptive Case Of COVID-19
Saskatchewan's Ministry of Health says the province has its first presumptive case of COVID-19.

Saskatchewan Announces First Presumptive Case Of COVID-19