C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

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cncpc
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by cncpc »

CpnCrunch wrote: Sat Nov 20, 2021 3:24 pm Metars and taf are at Ogimet metars.
Gfa at Gfaarchive.info
Thanks.
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by cargocowboy »

Guy had 80hrs TT and was headed for Missoula. Attempting to fly anywhere in a 182 on that particular day was insanity, Missoula would be (was) suicidal.
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by SpyPilot »

Where did you come up with the flight time?

How do you know it was headed for Missoula?

The aircraft is registered to a Lloydminster company and address. According to FlightAware, it was tracking north in the vicinity of the Coquihalla after overflying Hope before crashing near Needle Peak.

Apparently, after leaving Nanaimo it flew southeast crossing into U.S. airspace over the Southern Gulf Islands. After some unusual maneuvering in northwest Washington State it crossed back into Canada east of Abbotsford, managed to find Hope and the rest is history.

P.S. After further review. The area where the maneuvering appeared was in near line with a direct track from Nanaimo to Missoula. Likely ran into crap, decided to bail and try for home.
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by cargocowboy »

Aircraft was registered to Border City Aviation but apparently he had purchased it recently. Source is/was close to the pilot in question, and also a pilot.
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by karmutzen »

Don't think Missoula is a port of entry, no customs, he'd have planned to clear elsewhere. I'd have gone Bellingham, and get it out of the way, especially with weather questionable through destination.

If you put on your regulator hat, where was the system failure here? Something missing in training? Weather briefing?
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by cargocowboy »

I'm hesitant to spread second hand information and opinion, but 10:1 the final report says something about Human Factors - Hazardous Attitudes
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by cncpc »

cargocowboy wrote: Wed Nov 24, 2021 8:51 am Aircraft was registered to Border City Aviation but apparently he had purchased it recently. Source is/was close to the pilot in question, and also a pilot.
Still registered to Border City. Sale must have been in last few weeks.

Missoula makes sense though. I mean, as an explanation for why he was in US territory. The idea of going there in that weather was very foolish.
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by cncpc »

karmutzen wrote: Wed Nov 24, 2021 9:50 am Don't think Missoula is a port of entry, no customs, he'd have planned to clear elsewhere. I'd have gone Bellingham, and get it out of the way, especially with weather questionable through destination.

If you put on your regulator hat, where was the system failure here? Something missing in training? Weather briefing?
You've got Therman Munson syndrome in the mix, or substitute any name of any pilot who had an aircraft and nobody to say "Don't do that" and he did anyway and died, in this case taking someone else with him. I don't see fault with TC in this.

He had to be talking to ATC in all that stuff between takeoff and at least crossing by YXX.
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by CpnCrunch »

cncpc wrote: Wed Nov 24, 2021 1:57 pm Still registered to Border City. Sale must have been in last few weeks.
It's taking pacific region about 5 months to update registrations at the moment.
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by cncpc »

CpnCrunch wrote: Wed Nov 24, 2021 2:56 pm
cncpc wrote: Wed Nov 24, 2021 1:57 pm Still registered to Border City. Sale must have been in last few weeks.
It's taking pacific region about 5 months to update registrations at the moment.
And Pacific Region TSB might as well not be there, from what I hear. No regional director, last one left under some cloud, no investigator who has ever been to a crash site.

I can't find a CADOR either.
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by 7ECA »

CADOR is up, #2021P2041:
Occurrence Summary
Date Entered: 2021-11-17
Narrative: A Border City Aviation Ltd. Cessna R182 (C-FBKJ) on a VFR flight from Nanaimo, BC (CYCD) to Glacier Park, MT (KGPI) was not in contact with air traffic control (ATC) and disappeared off the radar approximately 15NM northeast of the Hope, BC non-directional beacon (NDB). Subsequently, an emergency locator transmitter (ELT) went off that was consistent with the aircraft identification.
Occurrence Summary
Date Entered: 2021-11-25
Narrative: UPDATE: Aviation Incident Report: At approximately 2350Z, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) National Operation Centre (NOC) received a call from the US Army Air and Marine Operations Center (AMOC) regarding an aircraft that was last seen on their radar 15 miles east of Hope, BC. The aircraft was a Border City Aviation Ltd. Cessna 182 (C-FBKJ) which had departed from Nanaimo, BC (CYCD) and was en route to Glacier Park, MT (KGPI). The aircraft was following the flight plan until it became erratic when it approached bad weather in Central Washington State, which forced the pilot to return across the Canadian border. The aircraft was last seen approximately 15NM east of Hope, BC. Following a conversation between the RCMP NOC, AMOC and the NAV CANADA Operations Centre in Surrey, BC, the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) unit was notified. The emergency locator transmitter (ELT) was activated and a signal was heard. The CAF unit attempted to send a Cormorant, however it was not able to reach the area due to the current weather. The Transportation Safety Board of Canada (TSB) was notified and the RCMP Hope detachment was investigating the incident. At 0940Z, the crash site was located. The coordinates are 49 32.96N / 121 07.99W, approximately 18.5NM NE of Hope, BC (CYHE). The fuselage was noticed from the air. Part of the aircraft was observed up in a tree. There had been 2 occupants onboard C-FBKJ. The Search and Rescue (SAR) crew was hoisted on site but the Cormorant had to leave the site to refuel. The Cormorant was unable to return to the crash site due to deteriorating weather. It was arranged for a second helicopter to be sent at first light to the crash site, weather permitting. The SAR technicians later confirmed that the 2 occupants of the aircraft did not survive.
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by cncpc »

Thanks.
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by cncpc »

He didn't have 7 children. He had two. It wasn't his wife who was the passenger.

The CADORS doesn't seem to match up with that FlightAware trace somebody was good enough to post here.

How reliable is that 88 TT figure? If it is reliable, who trained this guy? Who sold him this airplane? Border City?
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by cargocowboy »

6 children between the 2 occupants.
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by AirFrame »

cncpc wrote: Fri Nov 26, 2021 2:12 pmThe CADORS doesn't seem to match up with that FlightAware trace somebody was good enough to post here.
It's bang on if you take "central washington state" as "central washington *coast*".
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by 5x5 »

‘Bob’ wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 11:51 am Where’s your sense of adventure? Done it lots. Safer than a V1 cut in most turboprops.
My sense of adventure doesn't include unnecessary risk.

And the only time that "single engine piston", "VFR", "mountains" and "night" should be used in the same sentence is as follows ......"Don't fly a single engine piston aircraft VFR in the mountains at night!"
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by Big Pistons Forever »

5x5 wrote: Sat Dec 11, 2021 4:56 pm
‘Bob’ wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 11:51 am Where’s your sense of adventure? Done it lots. Safer than a V1 cut in most turboprops.
My sense of adventure doesn't include unnecessary risk.

And the only time that "single engine piston", "VFR", "mountains" and "night" should be used in the same sentence is as follows ......"Don't fly a single engine piston aircraft VFR in the mountains at night!"
+ 1
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Re: C-182 crashes near Needle Peak

Post by Bug_Stomper_01 »

Big Pistons Forever wrote: Sat Dec 11, 2021 6:50 pm
5x5 wrote: Sat Dec 11, 2021 4:56 pm
‘Bob’ wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 11:51 am Where’s your sense of adventure? Done it lots. Safer than a V1 cut in most turboprops.
My sense of adventure doesn't include unnecessary risk.

And the only time that "single engine piston", "VFR", "mountains" and "night" should be used in the same sentence is as follows ......"Don't fly a single engine piston aircraft VFR in the mountains at night!"
+ 1
+2 even for an advanced driver this is a bad scenario
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