4 killed in B.C. helicopter crash (Aug 2008)

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W5
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4 killed in B.C. helicopter crash (Aug 2008)

Post by W5 »

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Re: 4 killed in B.C. helicopter crash

Post by Big Pratt »

Sad news to wake up to.

RIP


Hats off to the unsung heroes of aviation.
SAR Techs as well as airport CRFs.
Thanks for doing what you do!
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Re: 4 killed in B.C. helicopter crash

Post by golden hawk »

At least 2 die in helicopter crash in northwest B.C.
Last Updated: Wednesday, August 6, 2008 | 4:01 PM ET Comments3Recommend24CBC News
A chopper carrying four people plunged into the Kitsault River near Alice Arm, B.C., around 7 a.m. Wednesday. (CBC) At least two people on board a chartered helicopter died after it crashed into a river about 150 kilometres northeast of Prince George, B.C., Wednesday morning.

A spokesman for the Canadian Coast Guard told CBC News the chopper carrying four people plunged into the Kitsault River near Alice Arm around 7 a.m.

Dan Bate said two people were found dead at the crash site and a Canadian Coast Guard helicopter with RCMP officers and a coroner on board was en route to the site.

Dave Zall, president of Prism Helicopters, which is headquartered in the Vancouver suburb of Pitt Meadows, told CBC News the chopper belonged to his company.

He said there were no survivors and "that's all we know right now."

"It's a sad day for all of us here, and nobody likes to see this happen," Zall said.

Neither the RCMP or the Canadian Coast Guard would confirm that all four people aboard the helicopter died in the incident.

This is the second fatal aircraft crash in B.C. in less than a week. A plane went down on Vancouver Island on Sunday killing five people.
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columb ... crash.html
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Re: 4 killed in B.C. helicopter crash

Post by sky's the limit »

Oh shit....

If anybody happens to hear who was flying, a PM would be much appreciated, know several guys there.

Again, deepest condolences to all. Fly safe out there people, season's almost over...


stl
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Re: 4 killed in B.C. helicopter crash

Post by SeptRepair »

Dam and just last night a Carson S61 crashed in Northern California killing nine. I just flew out on time off from the fires there that morning. Hope to christ thats the last major accident for awhile. Anyone believe in that superstition of terrible things happen in threes? Pasco, Prism, and now Carson.
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Re: 4 killed in B.C. helicopter crash

Post by sky's the limit »

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ ... m_mostview




ANNA MEHLER PAPERNY

Globe and Mail Update

August 6, 2008 at 5:10 PM EDT

VANCOUVER — Four people are dead following a helicopter crash into a remote northwestern British Columbia river.

The chopper crashed about 8 a.m. local time, flipping over into the icy and fast flowing Kitsault River near Alice Arm, B.C., about 150 kilometres northeast of Prince Rupert.

A search and rescue team had to parachute into the site where they immediately found two people dead and confirmed later a second two had died, said Second Lieutenant Jill Strelieff.

She could not say whether the victims died on impact or afterwards, and where they were in relation to the crash site. She said the area where the helicopter crashed is densely wooded and difficult for rescuers to access.

“It's not how we would have liked it to end,” said Second-Lt. Jill Strelieff of the Victoria Rescue Co-ordination Centre.

“Whenever we have a situation like this, we always hope for the best outcome and unfortunately in this situation we didn't have any survivors.”

Second-Lt. Strelieff said it was tough for the rescuers to get to the scene where they found the helicopter upside down in the river.

“[It's] very difficult terrain. There are a lot of gorges, steep cliffs. It's a difficult terrain to get into,” she said. “It's a fairly swift-moving body of water. It just added complications to the rescue.”

Prince Rupert RCMP Constable Krista Vrolyk said the Canadian Coast Guard, the RCMP's marine section and dive team and the Prince Rupert RCMP were trying to recover the bodies. She wouldn't release any information on the victims because RCMP are still contacting family members.

The helicopter, an MD 500D, belonged to Pitt Meadows-based Prism Helicopters. Prism President Dave Zall said the helicopter was chartered for a job in that area but he can't elaborate as to who had chartered the helicopter or for what purpose.

“There was a job that we were on working in that area. ... We have to wait for more information to come in. I can't speculate; I have to make sure we have facts.”

This is the second fatal air craft crash in B.C. this week. On Sunday morning a float plane crashed on Vancouver Island, leaving five of the seven occupants dead.

That day the crew of log loaders, all employees of the marine transport company Seaspan International, climbed aboard a vintage Grumman Goose operated by Pacific Coastal Airlines at the Port Hardy airport for a 20-minute flight to a logging camp on the west coast of Vancouver Island. The six passengers were wearing bright orange floater jackets, ready for the water landing of the amphibious aircraft.

Seventeen minutes after takeoff, the plane slammed into a mountainside, killing the pilot and the four passengers sitting up front.

The flight plan had taken them over a densely wooded mountain range on central Vancouver Island. Investigators initially suggested the twin-prop engines may have stalled, but a Transportation Safety Board official said on the weekend there is no evidence yet of a malfunction.

"Our information for this is that everything was working okay," Bill Yearwood said.

"We have to look at the weather, the aircraft itself, the operation, the man-machine interface."

Hitting a mountainside at an elevation of 600 metres, the plane burst into flames. Two men managed to climb out of the wreckage minutes before a series of explosions consumed the body of the plane.

Three hours after the crash, convinced they had been abandoned, one of the surviving men managed to limp to a peak where his cellphone reception was strong enough for him to text-message a colleague, asking for help.

Search-and-rescue teams struggled throughout the day to hone in on the weak, intermittent signals from the cellphone. The thickly wooded terrain hid the wreckage, and the aircraft's emergency beacon was destroyed.

The break came when Billy Ternes, a search master aboard a Squadron 442 Cormorant helicopter, spotted a burn mark in the trees at 4:32 p.m., just north of Port Alice. "You almost had to be right on top to see it," said Sgt. Simpson, the search-and-rescue team leader.

There was nowhere to land, so the search and rescue team lowered themselves by rope 45 metres down to a spot nearby. The wash from the props sent trees crashing down around the medical crew. It was, he said, "a nasty spot."

Names of the victims of that crash have been released.

Terry Axton, 51, worked for Seaspan as log loader. He was with the company for more than 30 years. He lived with his partner Grace and two children in Maple Ridge.

Mark McLean, 48, had worked with Seaspan as a log loader since June 2008. He lived in Comox and is survived by his wife Deb and his stepdaughter Meghan McMurran.

Scott Thorne, 56, worked as a mate and had been with Seaspan for 30 years. He's survived by his wife and two daughters in Vancouver.

Grant Wood, 62, worked as a log loader and had been with Seaspan for 23 years. He's survived by his wife and two children, who live in Chilliwack.
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Re: 4 killed in B.C. helicopter crash

Post by Widow »

Chopper crash cause close

Updated: August 8 at 04:53 PM CDT

VANCOUVER — Transportation Safety Board investigators think they’ve zeroed in on the cause of a deadly helicopter crash in northwestern B.C. this week that killed two Manitobans.

Walter Bodnar, 55, and his nephew Nicholas Bodnar, 27, both of Ste. Rose du Lac, were killed when a helicopter lost control and crashed 150 kilometres north of Prince Rupert, B.C., on Wednesday.

The pilot and three passengers died Wednesday morning when the Prism Helicopters Hughes 500 crashed upside down into the Kitsault River shortly after leaving Alice Arm, 150 kilometres northeast of Prince Rupert.

Safety board spokesman Bill Yearwood says the investigation is focused on parts of the helicopter’s controls that appear to have been damaged before impact.

Yearwood says that damage is not related to a conventional mechanical failure but was caused by equipment that’s not normally part of the aircraft in flight.

He won’t give specifics until the report is ready for release, which could take several months.

Yearwood says the wreckage has been turned over to Prism Helicopters and its insurance underwriter.


-- THE CANADIAN PRESS
http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/breaki ... 2693c.html

My deepest condolences to all affected.
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Last edited by Widow on Fri Aug 08, 2008 5:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: 4 killed in B.C. helicopter crash

Post by sky's the limit »

The Driller on board was on my crew last summer.... Rest in peace big guy.

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Re: 4 killed in B.C. helicopter crash

Post by King of Obsolete »

we will be drinking a bottle of gibbsons finest to remember the drillers. two great guys that will be missed.
our thoughts for the others on board.

thansk
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Re: 4 killed in B.C. helicopter crash

Post by SeptRepair »

WOW!! Read the latest Aviation Safety letter. http://www.tc.gc.ca/civilaviation/publi ... htm#missed
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Re: 4 killed in B.C. helicopter crash

Post by HS-748 2A »

I knew him well.

Also, I've seen people forget stranger things with less consequence.

In retrospect, of course - a strap that ties to the door knob - Simple.

Hopefully we will all have the where-withall to recognise that sort of weak link and rectify before something like that happens.

The rainbow painted helicopter probably contributed to that one as well.

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