Chute
Failure Cited In Fatal Crash
Two men who died in the crash of a Czech-built light-sport aircraft in
Rhoadesville, Virginia, in May 2016 had deployed a parachute recovery system,
but it failed when the single front attachment point detached, according to a
recent NTSB report. According to the NTSB, the pilot had recently purchased the
Jihlavan KP 5 ASA (Skyleader 500), an all-metal, two-seat, low-wing aircraft,
with a chute supplied by Galaxy Rescue Systems, and was taking instruction in
it to satisfy insurance requirements. Radar data indicated that, during the
flight, the airplane's groundspeed decreased from 94 to 62 knots, consistent
with airwork such as slow flight and stall practice. Subsequently, several witnesses
saw the airplane descending nose-down with the parachute deployed and still
attached, but with the canopy only partially inflated, before the airplane
impacted terrain.
The owner likely activated the parachute due to inadvertent spin entry, according
to the NTSB. The previous owner of the airplane told the safety board he had to
be vigilant during stall practice because "the airplane always seemed to
yaw abruptly to the right and into a spin, more so than any other airplane he
had flown." The NTSB said Galaxy Rescue Systems told them the accident was
the first time one of the chutes had been deployed in flight. During
certification, one test deployment was performed on the ground. The current
design includes two front anchors instead of one. The accident airplane was
about 50 pounds over its maximum takeoff weight at the time of the parachute
deployment, the NTSB said. The NTSB completed its report in September, but it
was just reported by the local Freelance Star in Fredricksburg, Virginia, this
week.
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