Så vidt jeg kan se er det ingen Bell 407 i norsk luftfartøyregister. Dette har imidlertid skjedd med AW139 også. Disse er det 6 av i norsk register. (Red.)
Big Island helicopter crash leads NTSB to call for urgent safety
inspections of Bell 407
December 4, 2022 · 4:30 PM
GMT+1
In response to
the findings of the June 8 helicopter crash in a lava field on South Point, the
National Transportation Safety Board issued urgent recommendations on Friday for immediate and more frequent
inspections of tail boom components on Bell 407 aircraft.
In the Big
Island crash, the tail boom separated from the fuselage of a Bell 407 during a
sunset tour operated by Paradise Helicopters out of Kona.
Main wreckage of Big Island helicopter crash in lava-covered terrain on South Point. Photo Courtesy: Hawaiʻi County
The
54-year-old pilot and 19-year-old passenger in the co-pilot seat were seriously
injured, while the four passengers in the back walked away from the crash in a
remote area of the island.
NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy said the Bell 407 helicopter is a popular model among tour operators, police departments, air ambulance providers and others.
“[This] is why
our finding is so urgent,” she said. “We’re calling on regulators to act
immediately – before there’s another accident.”
In the Big
Island accident, investigators located the tail boom more than 700 feet from
the rest of the helicopter.
According to
the pilot, about 30 minutes into the flight, the helicopter began an
uncontrolled spin to the right. A passenger reported that as the helicopter
continued to spin, she observed something fall off the helicopter. The pilot
made two May Day calls and told his passengers to brace for a hard landing as
he tried to level the helicopter, which continued to spin uncontrollably until
it crashed on the lava field.
Tail boom of Big Island crash. Photo Courtesy: NTSB
An examination
of the helicopter wreckage revealed that the upper left attachment hardware,
one of four fittings that attaches the tail boom to the fuselage, was missing
and could not be located at the accident site. The remaining three fittings and
hardware were found with the tail boom. One fitting had multiple fatigue
fractures and two fittings had overload fractures.
The NTSB is
urging the United States’ Federal Aviation Administration and Transport Canada
to require immediate inspections of the tail boom attachment hardware and
fittings.
The NTSB also
said the 300-hour inspection interval the manufacturer required for the tail
boom attachments may not detect missing or fractured hardware before the tail
boom separates from the fuselage. It said the inspections should be done more
often.
This was based
on the crash investigation that found the accident occurred just 114 hours
following the last inspection of the crashed Paradise helicopter, which did not
turn up any anomalies.
The preliminary report for the ongoing investigation of the Kalaʻe,
Hawaii, accident was published June 22. The public
docket for that accident was opened Oct. 31.
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