Los Angeles Airways Flight 417

Los Angeles Airways Flight 417
Accident summary
Date August 14, 1968
Summary Mechanical Failure
Site Compton, California
33°54′N 118°12′W / 33.900°N 118.200°WCoordinates: 33°54′N 118°12′W / 33.900°N 118.200°W
Passengers 18
Crew 3
Injuries (non-fatal) 0
Fatalities 21 (all)
Survivors 0
Aircraft type Sikorsky 61L
Operator Los Angeles Airways
Registration N300Y
Flight origin Los Angeles International Airport
Destination Disneyland Heliport

Los Angeles Airways Flight 417 was a helicopter that crashed on August 14, 1968 in the city of Compton, California. All eighteen passengers and three crewmembers were fatally injured. The aircraft was destroyed by impact and fire. According to the National Transportation Safety Board the probable cause of the accident was fatigue failure. The accident happened when the (arbitrarily designated) yellow blade, one of five main rotor blades, separated at the spindle which attached the blade to the rotor head. Following failure, the helicopter was uncontrollable and it fell to the ground. The fatigue crack originated in an area of substandard hardness and inadequate shot peening.[1]

History

Los Angeles Airways (LAA) Flight 417 was a regularly scheduled passenger flight from Los Angeles International Airport to the Disneyland Heliport in Anaheim, California. The aircraft and crew had completed three round trips to various destinations in the Greater Los Angeles Metropolitan Area beginning at 0607 PDT and departed the ramp at Los Angeles for Flight 417 at 1026. The flight, operating under Visual Flight Rules was cleared by Los Angeles Helicopter Control to take off and proceed eastbound at 10:28:15. At 10:29:30 the flight reported to Hawthorne Tower that it was departing Los Angeles eastbound along Imperial Highway at 1,200 feet (370 m). At 10:32:55 Helicopter Control advised, "L.A. four seventeen, seven miles east, radar service terminated." The flight acknowledged, "Four seventeen thank you." This was the last known radio contact with the flight.[1]

Statements were obtained from 91 witnesses. A consensus of their observations indicates that the helicopter was proceeding along a normal flightpath when a loud noise or unusual sound was heard. A main rotor blade was either observed to separate or was seen separated in the vicinity of the main rotor disc. As the helicopter fell in variously described gyrations, the tail cone either folded or separated. In order to establish an approximate altitude for the flight, several comparative flights were conducted in a similar helicopter. Most witnesses indicated the flights at 1,200 feet (370 m) to 1,500 feet (460 m) appeared to be most accurate.[1]

Wreckage

The aircraft crashed in Lueders Park in Compton, a recreational park located in a residential area bordering Rosecrans Avenue. The entire fuselage, both engines, main rotor head assembly, four main rotor blades, and the pylon assembly were located in the main impact area. The fifth main rotor blade (yellow) including the sleeve and part of spindle, was located approximately 0.25 miles (0.40 km) north-west of the main wreckage site. Minor parts associated with this rotor blade were scattered over a three-block area northwest of the park. Examination of the yellow blade spindle (S/N AJ19) revealed a fatigue fracture in the shank of the spindle adjacent to the shoulder in the inboard end of the shank.[1]

Aircraft

N300Y departing the Disneyland Heliport five years prior to the accident flight

N300Y, a Sikorsky S-61L helicopter, serial number 61031 was the prototype for the S-61L, and had accumulated 11,863.64 total flying hours prior to the day of the accident. It is estimated that approximately 3.17 hours were flown on August 14, 1968. The aircraft was equipped with two General Electric CT58-140-1 turboshaft engines.[1]

The aircraft was serviced with 1,000 pounds (450 kg) of JP-4 fuel and had a takeoff gross weight of 17,185 pounds (7,795 kg), which was below the maximum allowable takeoff weight of 19,000 pounds (8,600 kg). The computed centre of gravity at the time of the accident was 260.111 inches (660.68 cm) from datum, which is 267.4 inches (679 cm) forward of the main rotor hub centerline. The allowable limits are from 256.0 inches (650 cm) to 278.7 inches (708 cm) for a gross weight of 17,000 pounds (7,700 kg). The estimated gross weight at the time of the accident was 17,118 pounds (7,765 kg).[1]

Findings

In the course of the investigation by the NTSB they made the following findings:[1]

  1. The aircraft gross weight and center of gravity were within limits.
  2. The crewmembers were qualified for the flight.
  3. The yellow main rotor blade separated in flight rendering the aircraft uncontrollable.
  4. Blade separation was due to fatigue failure of the spindle.
  5. The fatigue crack was a high-cycle, low-stress type which propagated over a long period of time.
  6. The crack initiated because of a combination of the following factors:
    1. Metal hardness below specifications associated with a banded microstructure.
    2. Improper peening of the base metal surface.
    3. Possible detrimental effect of residual tensile stress from the plating.
    4. Pitting which may have been present in the base metal surface.
  7. It is believed that the crack was present at the last magnaglo inspection of the part, and it is not known why it was not detected.

Probable cause

The National Transportation Safety Board determined the probable cause of the accident as the fatigue failure of the yellow main rotor blade spindle, causing separation of the blade which made the aircraft uncontrollable. The fatigue crack originated in an area of substandard hardness and inadequate shot peening.[1]

NTSB Recommendation & FAA reaction

Following the initial evidence of a metal fatigue type failure, the National Transportation Safety Board recommended on August 16, 1968 to the Federal Aviation Administration:[1]

Based on its preliminary findings in the Compton crash investigation, the Safety Board today is recommending to the Federal Aviation Administrator that he (1) require an immediate fleet inspection of all Sikorsky S-61 helicopter spindle units; (2) adopt a more precise and frequent inspection to preclude future spindle unit failures; and (3) study the need for establishing a retirement life for this vital part.

On the same date the FAA issued Emergency Airworthiness Directive 68-19-07. The directive has since been amended twice and now requires the following action:[2]

(a) Before further flight, remove main rotor blade spindles P/Ns S6110-23325-1, S6110-23325-2, and S6112-23025-1 that either have been "salvaged" in accordance with procedures set forth in paragraph entitled "Salvage of Spindle" contained in Sikorsky Aircraft Overhaul Manual for the pertinent helicopter model, or have accumulated 3000 or more hours' time in service on the effective date of this AD, and replace with blade spindles of the same part number that have not been "salvaged" and that have less than 3000 hours' time in service.

(b) Replace main rotor blade spindles P/Ns S6110-23325-1, S6110-23325-2, and S6112-23025-1, that have not been "salvaged" and have less than 3000 hours' time in service on the effective date of this AD, before the accumulation of 3000 hours' time in service with main rotor blades spindles of the same part number that have not been "salvaged" and have less than 3000 hours' time in service.

(c) Before further flight, remove from service main rotor blade spindles P/N's S6110-23325-1, S6110-23325-2, and S6112-23025-1, serial numbers AX51, AX54, F2148, F2444, F2485, F2207, F1406, F1416, F1415, F1399, B-35, and F2451.

Notable passengers

Among the victims was passenger Christopher L. Belinn, the 13-year-old grandson of Clarence M. Belinn, the founder and president of Los Angeles Airways.[3] Also onboard were Captain John Patrick Meehan (retired) of the San Francisco Police Department along with his wife Helen Gertrude (née Smith), daughter Patricia Anne, and granddaughter Anne Marie also perished in the crash. Captain Meehan was the father of former Alameda County District Attorney John Joseph Meehan.

See also


References

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