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![]() Both Wings Cracked in Miami Beach Seaplane Crash, NTSB Report Says Monday, January 09, 2006 MIAMI - The seaplane that crashed off Miami Beach last month, killing all 20 people aboard, had fatigue cracks in both wings, a preliminary federal report said Monday. The right wing of the Chalk's Ocean Airways plane separated from the fuselage shortly before the Dec. 19 crash, and investigators had earlier found cracks on the right wing's support beam. But the new report by the National Transportation Safety Board on Monday revealed that the left wing had fatigue cracks as well. The 58-year-old, G-73 Turbine Mallard plummeted into the ocean minutes after taking off for the Bahamas. The NTSB's final report will be completed later this year, NTSB spokesman Paul Schlamm said. After the crash, the Federal Aviation Administration grounded all G-73 seaplanes until they could be inspected. Chalk's was the only commercial operator of the planes. The aircraft was built in 1947 as a Grumman Mallard. In 1979, it was modified to increase seating capacity from 10 to 17 passengers, and to replace the original engines. Chalk's began using the planes the following year, investigators said. A message left after business hours Monday for Chalk's general manager, Roger Nair, was not immediately returned. |
#2
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Well Sir, that's alarming.
A 60 year old plane with cracks in both wings. And still allowed to fly. No, fearful flyer, don't worry about the wings falling off. Can't happen. Unless it does. Then, you're quite abruptly....dead. But, Hey, cars are more dangerous, right. Statistics show....blah, blah, blah. |
#3
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"Joe Sterling" wrote in message
ups.com... Well Sir, that's alarming. A 60 year old plane with cracks in both wings. And still allowed to fly. No, fearful flyer, don't worry about the wings falling off. Can't happen. Unless it does. Then, you're quite abruptly....dead. But we have redundancies... Two radios in case one goes south on us... Two magnetos... To wings in case one decides to fall off... |
#4
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Grumman-581 wrote:
magnetos... To wings in case one decides to fall off... are you sure that wings actually fall off? would have thought the fuselage might, but not the wings... --Sylvain |
#5
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That explains why most early airplanes were bi-planes!
Mike Schumann "Grumman-581" wrote in message ... "Joe Sterling" wrote in message ups.com... Well Sir, that's alarming. A 60 year old plane with cracks in both wings. And still allowed to fly. No, fearful flyer, don't worry about the wings falling off. Can't happen. Unless it does. Then, you're quite abruptly....dead. But we have redundancies... Two radios in case one goes south on us... Two magnetos... To wings in case one decides to fall off... |
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"Jim Macklin" wrote in message
Both Wings Cracked in Miami Beach Seaplane Crash, NTSB Report Says When the right wing seperated, and the load trnsferred to the other wing which was also cracked as we now know, how come that wing didn't seperate as well? The video footage of the fire bomber C-130 shows this happening but it didn't happen on the Grumman. D. |
#7
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I was just passing on the news report about the NTSB. I
don't know if any of the cracks in the spar actually caused the right wing to break. I have not seen any detailed photos of the wing, the attach points or the spar. Has anybody heard any reports about the inspections on the remainder of the Chalk fleet? I presume that the NTSB report will take a year, do you think Chalks' will be able to fly before the final report? -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- The people think the Constitution protects their rights; But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome. some support http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm See http://www.fija.org/ more about your rights and duties. "Capt.Doug" wrote in message ... | "Jim Macklin" wrote in message | Both Wings Cracked in Miami Beach Seaplane Crash, NTSB | Report Says | | When the right wing seperated, and the load trnsferred to the other wing | which was also cracked as we now know, how come that wing didn't seperate as | well? The video footage of the fire bomber C-130 shows this happening but it | didn't happen on the Grumman. | | D. | | |
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"Capt.Doug" wrote in message
... When the right wing seperated, and the load trnsferred to the other wing which was also cracked as we now know, how come that wing didn't seperate as well? For a couple of reasons. One is that the presence of a crack weakens the wing, it doesn't guarantee that it will break. So, even if the load had transferred to the other wing, that doesn't necessarily mean it would break. The other is that to say that "the load transferred" is faulty thinking. The load didn't transfer to the other wing; the airplane banked into the missing wing. The load on the other wing remained the same initially, and then as control was lost, probably actually decreased as that wing lost lift. The video footage of the fire bomber C-130 shows this happening but it didn't happen on the Grumman. From memory granted, but my recollection is that the C-130 wings both failed nearly at the same time. I would guess that the two accidents are actually quite different, even though they appear the same. That is, the seaplane wing appears to have simply failed in unaccelerated flight, while the C-130 wings appear to have failed because of acceleration (pull-up). So, while in the case of the seaplane, the wing simply gave out once it had fatigued at the crack enough, in the case of the C-130, both wings were pushed past their strength at the same time by the increased load, and failed about the same time. Just a theory, and I may be misremembering the footage. And of course, I'm not a materials engineer, so my theories may be suspect in any case. ![]() Pete |
#9
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Pete, your point about the non-failed wing is valid. Think about the
torque at the wing root -, think about a see-saw. When both ends are loaded or both wings are generating lift, there's a certain torque. WHen the first one lets go, the other side experiences a decreasing torque, it is accelerating that side of the airplane up. Back to the see-saw: if it's in balance, the bending moments at the pivot are equal. When on kid `jumps off, the other side's bending moment really goes down: the other kid is in free fall, |
#10
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![]() "Jim Macklin" wrote \ I presume that the NTSB report will take a year, do you think Chalks' will be able to fly before the final report? "My" _totally_ uneducated guess is that they will be able to, after prudent inspections take place. The only hold-up could be obtaining insurance to keep them flying. -- Jim in NC |
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