I so appreciate the care and concern in your delivery of these videos. No attempt at blame or attempt to solve, just enough questions so that a pilot in a similar situation, until the official report comes out, might recall how this flight ended and make better choices.
Occasionally I used to fly Havana charters with EAL, leave midnight, hour on the ground, return. No problem. One time we had to wait for some reason and left at 4 or 5 am. We could not get a checklist done without a mistake and in hindsight I would say we were punchdrunk. Luckily benign conditions and an uneventful flight. I have done numerous international back side of the clock flights and with preparation and crew rest have never had a problem but I still remember that one midnight trip to Havana and know the back side of the clock is a dangerous place to be without preperation.
Based on reporting in the San Diego Tribune, this wasn't a charter flight carrying paying passengers but the lead pilot of the charter company taking his friends to Vegas, so it's unlikely he got any rest at all. I'm sure the NTSB will be looking hard at what the pilots were up to in the hours leading up to departure.
(Disclaimer) : I have no knowledge of the particulars of this flight..... But that won't stop me from making speculative reasons for this crash. Leaving at some ungodly hour of the AM because they don't want to miss work the next day; perhaps still F'd up from the booze, coke, hookers, etc. Localizer okay, glideslope (minimums) not so much. And of course the obligatory hubris and arrogance of the pilot in thinking he could pull it off. Although the missed approach might indicate otherwise.....
Another contributing factor is this runway had no approach lighting system, just runway edge lights, PAPI and REIL. An ALS may have helped them with the runway environment at minimums.
Thanks Greg. I was looking for someone to bring up the lights. Since they impacted short, but relatively aligned I would be interested to know if the lights were on and at what setting. Hope the investigation reveals if they had their landing light on. At night in the fog you can get blinded by your own lights.
Juan Browne (Blancolirio) thought the pilots mistook perimeter lights at parking lot short of airport as runway edge lights, and flew straight into the ground.
@@bja2024 The issue is they probably got off their instruments and distracted / disoriented by something. RNAV guidance is pretty accurate, so to land 500 meters short is crazy - any navigation instruments should have been pretty clear they were WAY low. And there is a big temptation to duck under in bad weather so folks do cheat a bit low sometimes.
@@randominternet5586The field where the plane crashed is about 50 feet below the elevation of the runway. The 2 pilots were thrown 200 feet from the wreckage and on the highway still strapped in their seats. I live about 500 yards from the crash site. Gruesome scene.
Remember Richard Collins saying many times that unless you had a real good reason to believe a second approach was going to be successful it was one of the most dangerous things you could do. Condolences to the families of all those lost.
@@FredVanAllenRealtor Richard felt that if you shot an approach down to minimums and couldn't see the runway the only reason to shoot another approach would be because your first approach was let's say a little sloppy, actually had ground contact but say you were high on the glideslope and couldn't land or the weather changed due to wind temp etc and the ceilings had come up some. He referenced the accident files and they are full of accidents happening when shooting 2 or more approaches when the conditions are not changing. Make it night and the risk factor goes up astronomical. His belief was there is also added pressure to get in on the next approach whether the pilot himself does it or the pilot feels pressure from an outside source. He was an on top of it aviator in my opinion.
Thanks for your great analysis and excellent presentation. The aircraft was equipped with a GTN750, so they were almost undoubtedly shooting the LPV approach. In fact, on the first attempt, Flight Aware shows them going missed at 1600 feet. The lighting, or lack thereof, (along with the poor visibility) is likely one of the major factors in this mishap. PCL is set to 15 min and even if they keyed the mike on final during the first approach, the lights may have turned off when they were on final for the second approach. Because of the reduced visibility, they wouldn't have noticed the lights had switched off. And although the runway is listed as having REIL, I can't remember the last time I saw them on. There is a shopping center about 1 mile north and some industrial buildings with security lights about 1/2 mile north of runway 18. It's likely that they saw those lights, and in the fog mistook them for the runway environment, particularly if the runway lights were off. If one pilot was on the gauges/GPS moving map and the other one looking outside, perhaps they could have known that they were not over the airport before being suckered into descending another 100 feet to look for the runway and ultimately landing short - at 130kts/150mph. I believe DHS has cameras near the threshold which may be able to answer the lighting issue, perhaps NTSB can obtain that info. And yes, the haunting question is what made them decide to shoot the second approach as opposed to diverting to KRIV, KHMT or several others reasonably close. Even if equipped with a CVR, it probably didn't survive the fire unless it's in the tail.
Great points! And the Riverside Justice Center is a few hundred yards East of the crash site. Im sure it has cameras that picked up a decent view if the fog didn't interfere. There is a slight decline in the slope there from of the North airport, overall sad loss of life.
On corporate operations many younger pilots will just do what ever they are told and not usually say no- which is a part of the job… only because if you say no you are done flying with that owner.
@@mxcollin95you won't get opportunities if you haven't had time to build experience. I had the same problem in construction and it's similar in health care and other Industries
I don’t believe I have heard a more comprehensive analysis of an accident before a final release of NTSB’s accident report. Very well done and thank you.
Well done! And this from a retired airline pilot. Back in the 1970s, I flew the mail in Beech 18s and we were always flying on the back side of our body clocks on all night flights. It was tough to fly 5 all nighters every week so I can sympathize with these pilots and their late night/early morning flying.
I think this was more of a leisure Flight a 45 minute hop from Harry Reid. The airport is non-towered with one runway in the middle of Temecula. It was probably well below weather minimums for safe approach, and he pushed the limits RIP to all those involved.
i FLEW cargo at night in south america. No GPS, bad maps, no A/C, no headsets, no weather radar, no ATC many times. Twin Commanders and Aztecs. We are survivors.. Cheers.
@@emergencylowmaneuvering7350 yeah I remember you guys flying "cargo" in Commanders and Aztecs... The planes often weren't in good shape either. And I remember some of you before you died...One in pecticular was a good man who succumbed to the need for money. RIP Francisco
Another channel speculated that parking lot lights "not too far" (which is a relative thing) from the end of the runway may have had the pilots think they were seeing the glow of runway lights through the fog.
what a disaster. family has everything going for them. handsome man and beautiful wife with children and now parents are gone forever. All I can do is shake my head. Life is precious. Prayers for everyone effected
You can have the whole world at your footstep, doesn't mean a thing, in one fleeting second all our material things, power and influence mean nothing. Only sure thing we have and that matters is knowing Christ, we never know when our time will come, so need to be ready before that moment happens.
So very sorry to hear of Richard's passing. I am not a pilot, but have always been fascinated with aviation and the remarkable men and women that dedicate their lives to mastering something as complex and unforgiving as manned flight. Richard's analyses have always been professional, insightful, easy to understand for the non-pilot, and ALWAYS respectful to the subjects and their families. There are many fine people on UA-cam doing similar analyses, but none come close to Richard's extraordinary refinement, objectivity, and sensitivity. Richard's work is the benchmark of excellence that I hope future channels will strive for. You will be missed, sir.
Crew rest fail! As managers and leaders we have got to ensure the folks we are asking to execute missions for us are fully rested before we send them into harm's way. Whether we are leaders in trucking, medicine, or aviation, we have got to stop setting our folks up by expecting them to work beyond safe human factors limits.
It was a part 91 flight more than likely with friends and the owner. Weather below minimums at an non towered airport likely cause. Maybe get there itis
Our boy… we will always remember the fun times we had with you in your dad’s office.We know you are resting and flying high. Thanks you for sharing so we can have closure on this accident. #LoveLikeRiese
SIC required is a normal limitation on a CE-500 type, regardless of other experience and type ratings. That should not be confused with a SIC only type. To get a type without the SIC requirement, you would need a separate (more expensive) check ride, and most people aren't flying Citations single pilot anyway
A check ride is a piece of paper.. Knowledge Ability and Personality is the key to working as a team And staying safe. Proper briefings go a long way and openness to accept information.
@jackodinsen2399 the Citations aren’t the fastest and they are relatively simple jets, but when something truly goes wrong it’s very beneficial to have a second person there to help
Colonel McSpadden, Thank you again for these videos. As a non-pilot your explanations of these incidents are excellent. I appreciate your expertise and professionalism. Paul (in MA)
Seems like this channel is accumulating non pilots, who are too eager to agree with the judgment passed. Maybe they need to pick a flight school and learn.
@@linanicolia1363I’m a non-pilot that watches this channel. I’ve always been interested in how things work, and what the root cause is when they don’t. But, as much as I’m fascinated with flying, I’ve concluded from watching these UA-cam channels that I have NO business taking up flying at age 62.
Well, not jumping any gun. It is clear, if you missed one approach and the weather is marginal or below minimums, the protocol is to pick an alternate airport. It is why they carry extra fuel ; always that option. Why attempt to make another mistake ?
The citation looks like it hit stalled, not at the normal 120 plus mph approach V ref. Why? It has a very short ground scar and hit tail first. Also notice on the photos from above, the elevator is full up too. For me looks like they got low, saw the lights of those buildings and panic pulled stall he did in fear. If panic pull with drag flaps on, (Some do the Panic Pull with both hands and add lots of up trim too) and delay the power that way, then you will stall it in a few seconds. Jets take more time to recover from a flaps down stall due no prop wind on the flaps. I used to teach 5 Feet Go Arounds as a CFI. Almost got killed by panic pullers with 2 hands. I had to add power for them. Yes, rushy and low go arounds are also Emergency Low Maneuvering. EFATO AND LOTO ARE BOTH ELM too.
EMERGENCY LOW MANEUVERING (ELM) That is the main cause of all those common stalls at under TPA. Hey Jay. Spot on. Vref of 100 knots the use will leave a ground scar much bigger than a hundred feet long.
Ok, lots of people making a ton of assumptions and totally bashing on ops they probably have no experience in. Firstly, let me just say I work for a Pt 91 jet management company and we also fly many similar airplanes to this one. No one yet has any idea what led to this accident, but there are so many people already bashing decisions they no know nothing about. Time - Yes, it was late in the evening. But weird hours are one of the reasons why people buy their own airplanes. Ignore the clock time for a second, and we see a duty time (assuming 1 hr before takeoff and 1 hr after landing) of 9 hrs, with a 4 hour rest in between flights. This is super typical of private jet operations, it just takes some coordination. Honestly, its a pretty light day really! Like the video says, we don't yet have any idea if they even worked the day leading up to the accident, so everyone already bashing the schedule as ridiculous is just wildly speculating. I've had many 'nocturnal' days myself. Mins - Tons of stuff to unpack here. First, as said in the video, for Pt 91 ops we can shoot the approach no matter what the reported weather is. That does *not* mean we can always land, but we can always try the approach to see. With sufficient gas, it almost always makes sense to give it a go. This isn't LAX where there's 10 people's full time job to maintain the weather station and put out weather reports. Small, podunk airports can have some really shitty weather stations that are just plain wrong sometimes. So while after the fact it's easy to say 'Oh the reported visibility was 1/4 mile less than mins, why bother?!', the reality is most automated weather stations can give some really shitty reports that might be inaccurate. Also, the visibility given is the visibility at the automated station, which could be entirely on the other side of the airport, maybe even in it's own patch of fog that doesn't exist on final. My home airport AWOS is basically in a swamp and is very vulnerable to radiation fog after a rainstorm, causing it to read very low visibility when in reality the airport is clear and a million. Shooting the approach again - When it comes to shooting the approach again, this is also super common, if you have the gas. Especially at night, you may catch lights below you and think that you have a chance of breaking out the second time. Sometimes you just get unlucky with a bit of clouds right at the missed approach point and then have to try again. Assuming you're doing everything right, the 'cost' to just come around and try again is really quite low. Gas is usually the limiting factor here. It's not immediately 'Ohmygosh you shot the same approach twice, its get-there-itis and thats why they're dead!'. No, customer is paying to go to X, so you try to take them to X. If that doesn't work, or it isn't safe, then go elsewhere, but there has to be some effort to at least making it to where you're supposed to go. If the pilots thought there was a reason to try the approach again, then they probably had some reason to believe the second time would be easier. That could, of course, not be the case, maybe they truly did go below mins just in an effort to get there no matter what, but *we just don't know that yet*. Just like usual, everyone is jumping to conclusions. Just chill out, listen to the great early thoughts and analysis this channel always puts out, and you can bash schedules, operators, pilots, etc once the accident reports come out.
I agree that the assumptions are bad, but am I reading it correctly when it says that they landed in Las Vegas at 10:14pm and turned around and left Las Vegas just five hours later?
According to local media reports this wasn’t a revenue flight. He was transporting a bunch of friends to Las Vegas. Why so little time in Las Vegas I don’t know.
One could speculate that he was permitted to use the plane, but it must be at home position before a certain time in case a charter request comes in. Just a guess.
Oh, most know that if the crew rested for the estimated 2 hours between flights it was in a lounge chair at the FBO and the major factor that forced the crash was "get-there-itis, not the weather. There were airports in the area that were clear. A parked car at French Valley is no good if you land at Ryan Field and that fact has more to do with choosing to land where they did.
They were technically proficient because the first approach was spot on. For the 2nd they just went runway hunting, maybe they had spotted the rwy lights just after starting the go on the 1st approach? Were there street lights on the undershoot?? Proficiency includes decision making and they fell down on that one. Another getthereitis accident. Very sad and totally avoidable
Reminds me too much of my commuter days, continuous duty overnights (where you never really rest). As for the SIC required indicating low experience. Not necessarily (but probable in this case). If they typed in the plane, and the plane was not equipped for single pilot ops, they would’ve gotten the SIC restriction. If they trained in the sim, it would’ve been an add-on that the operator may have opted to not take. For example, when I was with the commuter and got my BE02 type, as an instructor the company usually got us single pilot rated. However, because of a conflict with the union (and I was low time), the fleet manager decided to hold off on my single pilot authorization to keep me out of the union conflict. As for the ‘pressure’ that Richard alludes to. Brings me back to one of my first 135 jobs. Management had a ‘nod and wink’ policy on minimums to the home field. One night I flew in. Back in that day the only approach was an NDB. Did the first approach, saw nothin and went missed. My FO saw the runway lights as I went around and said I was right over the runway. Repeated the approach to the miss. Now it’s late, no one in the office, and I decide to divert to the company base south. Next morning the Chief Pilot is on the phone reaming me out for not making it in, and then not going to the other base north of destination. Things like this start becoming subtle pressures that have to resisted, even if it means losing the job.
They do not put “CE500 SIC required” as a limitation because it’s the first type rating for a pilot. That is actually a different limitation which requires a certain number of hours of supervision from another CE 500 PIC typed Pilot. Since the CE500 can be flown as a single pilot airplane- “SIC required” is added as a limitation if the PIC type rating is earned with the benefit of an SIC rather than single pilot without the assistance of an SIC (called single pilot exemption). Basically you can sign up for either program when you do your training.
Landing at 10pm to be wheels up at 3:15am the very next morning is a red flag to me. I know, i wouldn't even feel comfortable driving traveling distances under those conditions.
Based on footage from the scene and map imagery, the impact location was about 600 ft or so north of the runway, and about 50 lower in elevation than the start of the runway. Additionally, the impact location had higher obstacles like power lines and buildings just a little bit further north, which were not hit. This may suggest they had a very steep rate of decent. They very well might have been chasing the RV lot lights north of the runway, mistakenly thinking it was the lights at the start of the runway given the thick fog. I am curious what the NTSB findings will be with the CVR, but I agreed that poor aeronautical decisions were made, I would bet that "get there-itis" was a factor too. Very sad situation, I feel for the families of all involved.
Never flew into this airport but drove by it for years. As I recall fog and wind hit this valley pretty regular in the early mornings. I distinctly remember creeping across that valley at 5mph in pea soup many a morning.
That fog is one of the reasons the nearby Temecula region has become known for some fairly good-quality wine. You would have to be either (1) unfamiliar with the area to not give adequate consideration to that condition, or (2) reckless.
I'd be interested in knowing their fuel situation and/or if and how much fuel they added in Vegas. It would seem that they did not know the destination weather until they dialed in ATIS, since they had already canceled IFR. Perhaps fuel was a concern and motivated "another look". It will be interesting to see what the NTSB can determine.
There was recently a crash involving 5 people at Grand Strand airport in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. I was wondering if you guys can do a video on this happening? I am training at the airport next to it and am curious why the plane went down.
That airplane top photo looks like he had full up elevator. Stalled on second low go around as it happens in VFR many times. Low go around stall again ?
Excellent analysis of the fatal crash . It seems like the two pilots were very young not to imply that they lacked proficiency. I believe rest after landing at Vegas will become more of a focus in the accident investigation since both approaches were almost identical. Thanks for your insightful analysis.
Very well done on the analysis, definitely human error from the start, fatigue brings along miss judgment, sad for the families involved, every pilot needs to understand we are humans, would have been better to get to a hotel, sleep a few hours and then get back in the air. Let's learn from this horrible preventable accident. Thx for your very professional overview of the whole flight. Cheers
A fog approach is not a difficult approach. No rain, turbulence, icing, etc. But it is the one which draws pilots into pushing mins. But at the time of the accident, it was still dark making the airport environment all more difficult to perceive at min or below.
Notably the runway does not have approach lighting system which under the circumstances could have resulted in confusing other misc lights with the runway end lights, esp in haze, extraneous lights can be very confusing and disorienting, the other thing is that haze or fog can cause distance/height estimation illusions as well as sometimes very bad back scatter (eg of landing lights). Getting a clearance so close to destination is itself hazardous as it (esp single pilot) means pilots(s) were likely not fully prepared for contingencies, prob did not have an alternate planned out, etc. F70 is also boxed in by hazardous terrain making low level maneuvering very hazardous at night. They should have planned back at Henderson - if missed, then we go to the relatively close by class C towered Ontario airport where they have landings light systems and long wide runways then Uber to destination. Also there can be a difference between fatigue and sleepiness - fatigue can usually be overcome but not sleepiness ; sleepiness is very bad, it facilitates confusion, hallucinations, and other cognitive/perceptual impairments.
I've had tule fog stop me at Hemet at night. I watched it coming in going from clear to fog in minutes. I didn't even attempt the approach and went to John Wayne and flew the ILS. Palm Springs has a great FBO and hotel rooms. It is very unlikely that Palm Springs wasn't clear.
A ceiling is not a requirement for a minimum. In either part 91 or part 135. You may prspeed as long as you have the required visibility At the final approach fix. Additionally you may descend below decision height with any of the items listed visible.
When a safe landing is in question, the better judgment or common sense kicks in, above any regulations or protocols. Can you do it safely or not ? That is the question. Gambling does not come to mind. These pilots may have experienced some physical impairment. We see a lot of it, right now. It is the elephant in the room.
@@linanicolia1363 That would be for the sunday flyer. You have to take a look as a pro pilot. Either that or you get fired. They just goofed what can I say.
Fedex and UPS pilots operate during those hours every single night, mostly without issue. So I don’t think there is a strong argument that the pilots were negligent to fly in the circadian window. It will all depend on their fatigue mitigation strategies and how long their duty day prior was.
@@RobtheAviator Hi Rob, I wasnt suggesting the pilots were "negligent" re the timing of their flight - i was only stating that that was a potential & insidious hazard that was not identified in the AOPA video. We may likely never know whether it/fatigue was a factor in the ax. But its important for all pilots to recognize the potential hazard, and adopt defenses to mitigate it.
Lots of excellent comments and insights. I’m sure the NTSB will look at fatigue. Hours of continuous wakefulness and circadian rhythm are likely to play a significant factor in their analysis. Another very important issue is the illusions that can lure a pilot to continue descent below minimums. A few lights here and there at night can lead to disorientation, or can be misinterpreted as the runway environment. Further, a Part 91 operation with young pilots would seem to have a very high risk profile. These kids want to please the boss, and are likely have very little experience and conviction to challenge the pressure that they had to complete the mission.
Do we know if this young pilot had a boss? The pilot, Riese Lenders opened an LLC on July 22 titled "RCL Aviation" seems to be in his name and he is the only contact listed. Could he have been flying under his own company with a co-pilot and therefore had more freedom to make the decisions for this flight?
@@haygoon5677 I read an interview with the owner of this jet. IIRC, The 32(?) year old pilot was his well respected employee of two years. He made no reference to the 25 year old individual- The 32 year old ( I don’t recall his name, hence my use of his age) called his boss and asked him if it would be ok if he flew a few friends to Las Vegas…The owner/boss agreed, and here we are. Obviously he didn’t share the full details of his agreement with his employee, but that was the basic explanation of how the trip came to exist…RIP to those folks, and comfort to their family and friends.
@@FIGGY65 I know, interesting part of the story, right? Who knows what kind of relationship/arrangement this pilot had with the owner of the plane? A finders fee? Employee discount? Job perk? “Get out there and sell sell sell !” ?
My money is that someone onboard, who was in a position of power, insisted that they land and take off with minimal rest, and insisted that they land at French Valley, regardless of weather, due to convenience. There are people out there that think that thier convenience trumps realities like weather and crew rest. And they will intimidate pilots into doing things they would not normally do. I'd bet this was one of those cases.
Flying an approach with Wx reported below mins is nerve racking, exciting and gratifying; all at the same time. I fly in FL where you hardly get good IMC. I had to fly an ILS approach into VDF with Wx reported below mins to pick up an Angel Flight. My Mooney is equipped with 80’s steam gauges but at least an HSI. While intercepting, I thought about that Mooney the got stuck in the power-lines during an approach. So while stablished, I laser focused on those gauges, kept those needles in the center and only looked up right at min and thankfully saw the threshold. I do do practice a lot of approaches with home sim. Even if it’s as simple as Xplane in an ipad, besides keeping current, I think it does help.
Good analysis, but that limitation does not mean it was there first type rating, it means they did not complete their single pilot course for the CE525. The limitation you are referring to is worded slightly differently and is found in 61.64F2
Based on what's shown in google earth pics and where the aircraft crashed, this might be a case of chasing lights that ended up not being the runway lights. This runway didn't have strobe approach lights, the runway lights aren't high intensity, there's a large building with parking lot lights right near where they crashed. The fact that they left Vegas in the middle of the night is a pretty good indicator that their passengers wanted to get back to French Valley before the morning, so it seems reasonable to believe this played a major role in their attempt to get in despite the fog, especially knowing it was likely the fog would burn off just a few hours later. Such a waste of life and yet another example of terrible decision making that takes so many lives.
This is also Dan Gryder’s take and I completely agree. They most likely saw the warehouse lights and pushed the nose over to duck under the layer into vmc conditions.
@@bwalker4194 I also agree with Dan Gryder, combined with pressure to land at French valley, (was the boss on the flight?) pushed the young pilot into a bad decision.
It isn’t clear to me whether the REILs were on or not , but in those approach conditions they’d be the only guaranteed proof of runway threshold for the pilot ; not a situation I’d want to be in.
@@bwalker4194 Dan Gryder is unprofessional and disrespectful in the amount of speculation and jumping to conclusions he is prone to do. He gets a lot of views though so I guess it’s worth it, right?
The impact location was about 600 ft or so north of the runway, and about 50 lower in elevation than the start of the runway. Additionally, the impact location had higher obstacles like power lines just a bit further north, which may suggest they had a very steep rate of decent. They very well could have been chasing the RV lot lights north of the runway, mistakenly thinking it was the lights at the start of the runway. I am curious what the NTSB findings will be with the CVR.
How much consideration is given to the age and level of experience? The “I can handle this situation” mixed with less experience, age where the risk side of the brain is less developed and toss in fatigue = a recipe that results in a very sad outcome. Great first look at a sad ending.
Is it that unusual to go missed then go for a second try? Maybe after 2 fails you'd think about your alternate but 1 failed doesn't mean immediately go to alternate?
Pilots sometimes cancel IFR so that they can make a more direct (quicker) approach to the airport. This assumes the field is VMC (good visibility). If you stay IFR then you will either have to fly the whole instrument procedure or be vectored to the approach and this can take longer than going directly to the airport.
He should have picked out an alternate airport. He was hopeful to the max, thinking he could beat that poor visibility. Bad move. He had evidently plenty fuel to go elsewhere as he burned up after he crashed. Very sad, for the families.
Good briefing. The CVR will be very helpful, if recovered. Fatigue has to be a major contributing factor, especially before the first flight. Pressure from someone in the cabin may factor in. Who flew the second approach? Interesting to see how the cheese matches up here.
IF the panel is like the one shown, is there even a way to couple the waas gps to that HSI? if not how could you shoot an lpv approach with vertical guidance? Either way the vertical profile of neither approach looked like a step down nor a glideslope derived approach profile. JMO
Very good initial analysis, thank you ! Given ,25 yr old PIC Trying to fool Mother Nature ! New pilot trying to keep the boss happy ! Let’s go a little lower on the second approach! I’ve seen it over and over ! ( True Safety Is No Accident ) God Bless all the families involved ! Hart Broken Captain Mark H Wirth
Richard, I know you kept saying why would they fly the 2nd approach, but my question is Why would they fly the first approach is minimums are not met? I mean the first approaches is just dogging me as to why even try it in those conditions?
The biggest question for me is not the second attempted approach but rather why would anyone choose to cancel IFR. I realize they picked up a IFR clearance again prior to both approaches but why cancel in the first place. Even if the weather would of been VFR, they were still flying at night in a mountainous area. That to me is more concerning than the second attempt to land.
Curious why they canceled IFR 20 minutes out? Awos-3 with phone number, includes ceilings, vis, altimeter etc. Why not call awos-3 before cancel IFR? Might not have current altimeter which could effect baro mins. Adsbexchange should have pretty accurate gps altitudes flown.
Too early to speculate on why they shot the approach a second time, fatigue, etc. My experience has been that a lot of times you see the field on the miss and get suckered in to thinking you can delay the GA call by a second and there you’ll be. Doesn’t always work out that way. Also not sure where they were on FOB.
Yeah , too easy with shallow layers of ground fog to see the runway and surroundings vertically , and get deceived into thinking that forward visibility once horizontally inside it with landing lights on should be possible to land , but end up not being able to see diddly.
Hmmm, for starters operating VFR in IMC. Respectfully, I see implications to return to this field before a deadline impacted multiple personal and professional decisions during this operation. My heart goes out to those affected by this tragedy.
I’d like to know even if the runway was missed was it possible to still land safely? They landed in a field, can’t Cessnas do that? Was it too sharp of a descent?
Article says the pilot earned his cert in April. I know they have to learn sometime but yikes I wouldn't want to be flying an early morning flight in a mountainous region in foggy conditions with a pilot who just earned his cert.
Great video . There are many tragic factors which you covered so well . Approach lights could have helped, however there are many factors here. Unfortunately I feel there may have been pressure to get in .
RIP Richard McSpadden. You were one of the greats and you made me a better pilot.
I will never attempt the impossible turn RIP so sad!
I cannot comprehend how that could happen to a guy with Spad's experience and SA. I am still shocked.@@twaktwin14
Appreciate these early analyses, but would really love some more Accident Case Studies.
It's not finished yet.
@@orijimi i think he means case studies in general for the channel
And you want it for free too?
Those ACS take a ton of work, which is why they take so long.
They are excellent though
I so appreciate the care and concern in your delivery of these videos. No attempt at blame or attempt to solve, just enough questions so that a pilot in a similar situation, until the official report comes out, might recall how this flight ended and make better choices.
Occasionally I used to fly Havana charters with EAL, leave midnight, hour on the ground, return. No problem. One time we had to wait for some reason and left at 4 or 5 am. We could not get a checklist done without a mistake and in hindsight I would say we were punchdrunk. Luckily benign conditions and an uneventful flight. I have done numerous international back side of the clock flights and with preparation and crew rest have never had a problem but I still remember that one midnight trip to Havana and know the back side of the clock is a dangerous place to be without preperation.
Thanks for sharing your experience.
Based on reporting in the San Diego Tribune, this wasn't a charter flight carrying paying passengers but the lead pilot of the charter company taking his friends to Vegas, so it's unlikely he got any rest at all. I'm sure the NTSB will be looking hard at what the pilots were up to in the hours leading up to departure.
They always do….. standard procedure for any investigation. Nothing different just because they were in Vegas.
They have a human factors investigator in the go team group. They look at everything. They even bring their own meteorologist.
ARE YOU HIS GIRLFRIEND? HOW DO YOU KNOW "HE DIDNT GET ANY REST". HOW?
@@Plutogalaxy Right, I know guys that loved to work the graveyard shift. And even after retiring still go to bed at 4-5 in the morning.
(Disclaimer) : I have no knowledge of the particulars of this flight..... But that won't stop me from making speculative reasons for this crash. Leaving at some ungodly hour of the AM because they don't want to miss work the next day; perhaps still F'd up from the booze, coke, hookers, etc. Localizer okay, glideslope (minimums) not so much. And of course the obligatory hubris and arrogance of the pilot in thinking he could pull it off. Although the missed approach might indicate otherwise.....
Another contributing factor is this runway had no approach lighting system, just runway edge lights, PAPI and REIL. An ALS may have helped them with the runway environment at minimums.
Great observation.
Thanks Greg. I was looking for someone to bring up the lights. Since they impacted short, but relatively aligned I would be interested to know if the lights were on and at what setting. Hope the investigation reveals if they had their landing light on. At night in the fog you can get blinded by your own lights.
Juan Browne (Blancolirio) thought the pilots mistook perimeter lights at parking lot short of airport as runway edge lights, and flew straight into the ground.
@@bja2024 The issue is they probably got off their instruments and distracted / disoriented by something. RNAV guidance is pretty accurate, so to land 500 meters short is crazy - any navigation instruments should have been pretty clear they were WAY low. And there is a big temptation to duck under in bad weather so folks do cheat a bit low sometimes.
@@randominternet5586The field where the plane crashed is about 50 feet below the elevation of the runway. The 2 pilots were thrown 200 feet from the wreckage and on the highway still strapped in their seats. I live about 500 yards from the crash site. Gruesome scene.
Remember Richard Collins saying many times that unless you had a real good reason to believe a second approach was going to be successful it was one of the most dangerous things you could do. Condolences to the families of all those lost.
I am curious as to the explanation as to why a 2nd attempt is dangerous?
@@FredVanAllenRealtor Richard felt that if you shot an approach down to minimums and couldn't see the runway the only reason to shoot another approach would be because your first approach was let's say a little sloppy, actually had ground contact but say you were high on the glideslope and couldn't land or the weather changed due to wind temp etc and the ceilings had come up some. He referenced the accident files and they are full of accidents happening when shooting 2 or more approaches when the conditions are not changing. Make it night and the risk factor goes up astronomical. His belief was there is also added pressure to get in on the next approach whether the pilot himself does it or the pilot feels pressure from an outside source. He was an on top of it aviator in my opinion.
I learned more than 50 years ago not to make the 3rd attempt.
Thanks for your great analysis and excellent presentation. The aircraft was equipped with a GTN750, so they were almost undoubtedly shooting the LPV approach. In fact, on the first attempt, Flight Aware shows them going missed at 1600 feet. The lighting, or lack thereof, (along with the poor visibility) is likely one of the major factors in this mishap. PCL is set to 15 min and even if they keyed the mike on final during the first approach, the lights may have turned off when they were on final for the second approach. Because of the reduced visibility, they wouldn't have noticed the lights had switched off. And although the runway is listed as having REIL, I can't remember the last time I saw them on. There is a shopping center about 1 mile north and some industrial buildings with security lights about 1/2 mile north of runway 18. It's likely that they saw those lights, and in the fog mistook them for the runway environment, particularly if the runway lights were off. If one pilot was on the gauges/GPS moving map and the other one looking outside, perhaps they could have known that they were not over the airport before being suckered into descending another 100 feet to look for the runway and ultimately landing short - at 130kts/150mph. I believe DHS has cameras near the threshold which may be able to answer the lighting issue, perhaps NTSB can obtain that info. And yes, the haunting question is what made them decide to shoot the second approach as opposed to diverting to KRIV, KHMT or several others reasonably close. Even if equipped with a CVR, it probably didn't survive the fire unless it's in the tail.
Great points! And the Riverside Justice Center is a few hundred yards East of the crash site. Im sure it has cameras that picked up a decent view if the fog didn't interfere. There is a slight decline in the slope there from of the North airport, overall sad loss of life.
Thank you so much Team AOPA for all the wonderful work you are putting into these videos. Sad for the families and friends.
On corporate operations many younger pilots will just do what ever they are told and not usually say no- which is a part of the job… only because if you say no you are done flying with that owner.
Yup!
If only they knew that those REALLY aren’t the kind of people you want to fly for anyway and better opportunities will come their way.
@@mxcollin95you won't get opportunities if you haven't had time to build experience. I had the same problem in construction and it's similar in health care and other Industries
He's done flying with this owner too now...
It’s a way to stay alive if you tell the owner no; ask Koby Bryant...
That could be the dreaded part 91 wait-and-return where the crew stole whatever rest they could find in the crew lounge. Those are the absolute worst!
I’m assured that they never left the FBO except maybe to find food.
I don’t believe I have heard a more comprehensive analysis of an accident before a final release of NTSB’s accident report.
Very well done and thank you.
Whow you can predict the future. And bullshit all us too. Fantastic. Now, what are the Superball winning numbers you said?
@@outwiththem ??????
@@Mikael5732You surpassed their comprehension by using a 4 syllable word. Gotta dumb it down for some people.
@@paulvoit5610 😂🤣
Well done! And this from a retired airline pilot. Back in the 1970s, I flew the mail in Beech 18s and we were always flying on the back side of our body clocks on all night flights. It was tough to fly 5 all nighters every week so I can sympathize with these pilots and their late night/early morning flying.
I think this was more of a leisure Flight a 45 minute hop from Harry Reid. The airport is non-towered with one runway in the middle of Temecula. It was probably well below weather minimums for safe approach, and he pushed the limits RIP to all those involved.
"I flew the mail in Beech 18s" That's a beautiful plane.
i FLEW cargo at night in south america. No GPS, bad maps, no A/C, no headsets, no weather radar, no ATC many times. Twin Commanders and Aztecs. We are survivors.. Cheers.
@@emergencylowmaneuvering7350 yeah I remember you guys flying "cargo" in Commanders and Aztecs... The planes often weren't in good shape either. And I remember some of you before you died...One in pecticular was a good man who succumbed to the need for money. RIP Francisco
@@RobArone1 Yep, drug runners used to offer me gold. But.. Some of my pilot friends died in differ accidents. I came back to USA. Saw too much.
Another channel speculated that parking lot lights "not too far" (which is a relative thing) from the end of the runway may have had the pilots think they were seeing the glow of runway lights through the fog.
Such a great quality video, thank you guys for improving these!
Agreed victor... These are very high quality videos along with all the careful analysis that is brought.. Outstanding.
what a disaster. family has everything going for them. handsome man and beautiful wife with children and now parents are gone forever. All I can do is shake my head. Life is precious. Prayers for everyone effected
You can have the whole world at your footstep, doesn't mean a thing, in one fleeting second all our material things, power and influence mean nothing. Only sure thing we have and that matters is knowing Christ, we never know when our time will come, so need to be ready before that moment happens.
One reason to shoot a second approach is if you forgot to activate pilot controlled lighting. I might know a guy who did that to once.
Always hope you got a rabbit to follow...
They hit before the runway. Before any rabbit lights could be either. For me, they did a panic pull doing a low go around and stalled it.
So very sorry to hear of Richard's passing. I am not a pilot, but have always been fascinated with aviation and the remarkable men and women that dedicate their lives to mastering something as complex and unforgiving as manned flight. Richard's analyses have always been professional, insightful, easy to understand for the non-pilot, and ALWAYS respectful to the subjects and their families. There are many fine people on UA-cam doing similar analyses, but none come close to Richard's extraordinary refinement, objectivity, and sensitivity. Richard's work is the benchmark of excellence that I hope future channels will strive for. You will be missed, sir.
Crew rest fail! As managers and leaders we have got to ensure the folks we are asking to execute missions for us are fully rested before we send them into harm's way. Whether we are leaders in trucking, medicine, or aviation, we have got to stop setting our folks up by expecting them to work beyond safe human factors limits.
Too early for that conclusion, without their actual duty/rest skeds. Not ruling it out though!
I do see some stats in the comments, not sure if they are valid...
I'm calling an attempted LNAV/VNAV using GP down to below mins and the inaccuracy of the gp ran him into the ground 500 short
It was a part 91 flight more than likely with friends and the owner. Weather below minimums at an non towered airport likely cause. Maybe get there itis
Possibly a huge affect on making decisions. Very sad, indeed.
I am very sorry for your loss. I always looked forward to Mr McSpadden's videos. I wish the McSpadden family my sincere condolences.
still can't believe this exceptional pilot and articulate guy is gone.
A guy with Spad's experience and SA...how could that have happened?
Our boy… we will always remember the fun times we had with you in your dad’s office.We know you are resting and flying high. Thanks you for sharing so we can have closure on this accident. #LoveLikeRiese
SIC required is a normal limitation on a CE-500 type, regardless of other experience and type ratings. That should not be confused with a SIC only type. To get a type without the SIC requirement, you would need a separate (more expensive) check ride, and most people aren't flying Citations single pilot anyway
The 500 series can be flown SP on 91 legs with a waiver, but its just as foolish as it sound to do so.
A check ride is a piece of paper.. Knowledge Ability and Personality is the key to working as a team And staying safe. Proper briefings go a long way and openness to accept information.
They confused the "SIC Required" limitation with "The CE525 is Subject to Pilot in Command Limitation," not the "SIC Only" type limitation.
@jackodinsen2399 the Citations aren’t the fastest and they are relatively simple jets, but when something truly goes wrong it’s very beneficial to have a second person there to help
May God comfort the families of those who perished. My sincerest condolences. Thank you for this information.
Colonel McSpadden,
Thank you again for these videos. As a non-pilot your explanations of these incidents are excellent. I appreciate your expertise and professionalism.
Paul (in MA)
Seems like this channel is accumulating non pilots, who are too eager to agree with the judgment passed. Maybe they need to pick a flight school and learn.
@@linanicolia1363 Or, maybe not. It's UA-cam, open to the public.
@@linanicolia1363I’m a non-pilot that watches this channel. I’ve always been interested in how things work, and what the root cause is when they don’t. But, as much as I’m fascinated with flying, I’ve concluded from watching these UA-cam channels that I have NO business taking up flying at age 62.
Excellent analysis and importantly NOT jumping the gun.
Well, not jumping any gun. It is clear, if you missed one approach and the weather is marginal or below minimums, the protocol is to pick an alternate airport. It is why they carry extra fuel ; always that option. Why attempt to make another mistake ?
The citation looks like it hit stalled, not at the normal 120 plus mph approach V ref. Why? It has a very short ground scar and hit tail first. Also notice on the photos from above, the elevator is full up too. For me looks like they got low, saw the lights of those buildings and panic pulled stall he did in fear. If panic pull with drag flaps on, (Some do the Panic Pull with both hands and add lots of up trim too) and delay the power that way, then you will stall it in a few seconds.
Jets take more time to recover from a flaps down stall due no prop wind on the flaps. I used to teach 5 Feet Go Arounds as a CFI. Almost got killed by panic pullers with 2 hands. I had to add power for them. Yes, rushy and low go arounds are also Emergency Low Maneuvering. EFATO AND LOTO ARE BOTH ELM too.
EMERGENCY LOW MANEUVERING (ELM) That is the main cause of all those common stalls at under TPA. Hey Jay. Spot on. Vref of 100 knots the use will leave a ground scar much bigger than a hundred feet long.
Ok, lots of people making a ton of assumptions and totally bashing on ops they probably have no experience in. Firstly, let me just say I work for a Pt 91 jet management company and we also fly many similar airplanes to this one. No one yet has any idea what led to this accident, but there are so many people already bashing decisions they no know nothing about.
Time - Yes, it was late in the evening. But weird hours are one of the reasons why people buy their own airplanes. Ignore the clock time for a second, and we see a duty time (assuming 1 hr before takeoff and 1 hr after landing) of 9 hrs, with a 4 hour rest in between flights. This is super typical of private jet operations, it just takes some coordination. Honestly, its a pretty light day really! Like the video says, we don't yet have any idea if they even worked the day leading up to the accident, so everyone already bashing the schedule as ridiculous is just wildly speculating. I've had many 'nocturnal' days myself.
Mins - Tons of stuff to unpack here. First, as said in the video, for Pt 91 ops we can shoot the approach no matter what the reported weather is. That does *not* mean we can always land, but we can always try the approach to see. With sufficient gas, it almost always makes sense to give it a go. This isn't LAX where there's 10 people's full time job to maintain the weather station and put out weather reports. Small, podunk airports can have some really shitty weather stations that are just plain wrong sometimes. So while after the fact it's easy to say 'Oh the reported visibility was 1/4 mile less than mins, why bother?!', the reality is most automated weather stations can give some really shitty reports that might be inaccurate. Also, the visibility given is the visibility at the automated station, which could be entirely on the other side of the airport, maybe even in it's own patch of fog that doesn't exist on final. My home airport AWOS is basically in a swamp and is very vulnerable to radiation fog after a rainstorm, causing it to read very low visibility when in reality the airport is clear and a million.
Shooting the approach again - When it comes to shooting the approach again, this is also super common, if you have the gas. Especially at night, you may catch lights below you and think that you have a chance of breaking out the second time. Sometimes you just get unlucky with a bit of clouds right at the missed approach point and then have to try again. Assuming you're doing everything right, the 'cost' to just come around and try again is really quite low. Gas is usually the limiting factor here. It's not immediately 'Ohmygosh you shot the same approach twice, its get-there-itis and thats why they're dead!'. No, customer is paying to go to X, so you try to take them to X. If that doesn't work, or it isn't safe, then go elsewhere, but there has to be some effort to at least making it to where you're supposed to go. If the pilots thought there was a reason to try the approach again, then they probably had some reason to believe the second time would be easier. That could, of course, not be the case, maybe they truly did go below mins just in an effort to get there no matter what, but *we just don't know that yet*.
Just like usual, everyone is jumping to conclusions. Just chill out, listen to the great early thoughts and analysis this channel always puts out, and you can bash schedules, operators, pilots, etc once the accident reports come out.
Excellent observations & comments! Its way too early to be 'sure' of anything.
I agree that the assumptions are bad, but am I reading it correctly when it says that they landed in Las Vegas at 10:14pm and turned around and left Las Vegas just five hours later?
According to local media reports this wasn’t a revenue flight. He was transporting a bunch of friends to Las Vegas. Why so little time in Las Vegas I don’t know.
How much time does it take to lose all your wages in Vegas? Not much.
One could speculate that he was permitted to use the plane, but it must be at home position before a certain time in case a charter request comes in.
Just a guess.
Hopefully NTSB can determine if the pilot controlled runway lights were on for the second approach. They time out after 15 minutes.
Oh, most know that if the crew rested for the estimated 2 hours between flights it was in a lounge chair at the FBO and the major factor that forced the crash was "get-there-itis, not the weather. There were airports in the area that were clear. A parked car at French Valley is no good if you land at Ryan Field and that fact has more to do with choosing to land where they did.
Sincere thanks for continuing to share 👍
RIP Richard! Loved your videos, sadly we didn't meet!
Possibly misidentified lighting on buildings in the final stages of the approach as the runway lighting, so continued to the accident sight.
They were technically proficient because the first approach was spot on. For the 2nd they just went runway hunting, maybe they had spotted the rwy lights just after starting the go on the 1st approach? Were there street lights on the undershoot??
Proficiency includes decision making and they fell down on that one. Another getthereitis accident. Very sad and totally avoidable
11 am shutdown, back at the airport at 3am is simply madness. And would be illegal if they were driving a semi truck
Excellent point.
Very, very good explained! Greetings from old Germany 🇩🇪
Reminds me too much of my commuter days, continuous duty overnights (where you never really rest).
As for the SIC required indicating low experience. Not necessarily (but probable in this case). If they typed in the plane, and the plane was not equipped for single pilot ops, they would’ve gotten the SIC restriction. If they trained in the sim, it would’ve been an add-on that the operator may have opted to not take.
For example, when I was with the commuter and got my BE02 type, as an instructor the company usually got us single pilot rated. However, because of a conflict with the union (and I was low time), the fleet manager decided to hold off on my single pilot authorization to keep me out of the union conflict.
As for the ‘pressure’ that Richard alludes to. Brings me back to one of my first 135 jobs. Management had a ‘nod and wink’ policy on minimums to the home field. One night I flew in. Back in that day the only approach was an NDB. Did the first approach, saw nothin and went missed. My FO saw the runway lights as I went around and said I was right over the runway. Repeated the approach to the miss. Now it’s late, no one in the office, and I decide to divert to the company base south. Next morning the Chief Pilot is on the phone reaming me out for not making it in, and then not going to the other base north of destination. Things like this start becoming subtle pressures that have to resisted, even if it means losing the job.
They do not put “CE500 SIC required” as a limitation because it’s the first type rating for a pilot. That is actually a different limitation which requires a certain number of hours of supervision from another CE 500 PIC typed Pilot. Since the CE500 can be flown as a single pilot airplane- “SIC required” is added as a limitation if the PIC type rating is earned with the benefit of an SIC rather than single pilot without the assistance of an SIC (called single pilot exemption). Basically you can sign up for either program when you do your training.
N819KR had a GTN625 installed. I have a video of it. I sat right seat on its delivery flight from PTB to Chino May 2022.
Professional, non biased and factual as usual. Like that you refrain from mud slinging.
he died doing what he loved and probably saved many lives with his method of teaching. RIP.
Excellent analysis. Thx!! Love the new format. !
Such a great quality video, thank you guys for improving these!. Such a great quality video, thank you guys for improving these!.
“Maybe this, maybe that.” Gotta love these comments. RIP Manny, Riese, friends and family onboard. Fly high.
Excellent analysis.
Landing at 10pm to be wheels up at 3:15am the very next morning is a red flag to me.
I know, i wouldn't even feel comfortable driving traveling distances under those conditions.
Wow, F70 was my solo airport! Flew in there many times last year. So sad to see such a devastating accident in this small community
Based on footage from the scene and map imagery, the impact location was about 600 ft or so north of the runway, and about 50 lower in elevation than the start of the runway. Additionally, the impact location had higher obstacles like power lines and buildings just a little bit further north, which were not hit. This may suggest they had a very steep rate of decent. They very well might have been chasing the RV lot lights north of the runway, mistakenly thinking it was the lights at the start of the runway given the thick fog. I am curious what the NTSB findings will be with the CVR, but I agreed that poor aeronautical decisions were made, I would bet that "get there-itis" was a factor too. Very sad situation, I feel for the families of all involved.
Never flew into this airport but drove by it for years. As I recall fog and wind hit this valley pretty regular in the early mornings. I distinctly remember creeping across that valley at 5mph in pea soup many a morning.
That fog is one of the reasons the nearby Temecula region has become known for some fairly good-quality wine. You would have to be either (1) unfamiliar with the area to not give adequate consideration to that condition, or (2) reckless.
I'd be interested in knowing their fuel situation and/or if and how much fuel they added in Vegas. It would seem that they did not know the destination weather until they dialed in ATIS, since they had already canceled IFR. Perhaps fuel was a concern and motivated "another look". It will be interesting to see what the NTSB can determine.
Considering the high cost of fuel at Vegas I doubt if any was put on board.as of today July 12,2023 $7.99 a gallon at KLAS.
As always, an excellent, measured and constructive first take on the incident.
There was recently a crash involving 5 people at Grand Strand airport in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. I was wondering if you guys can do a video on this happening? I am training at the airport next to it and am curious why the plane went down.
I'm in conway
@@NJDEVILz86 oh snap!! I fly out of there almost 3 times a week🔥
Excellent breakdown. Thx for sharing your thoughts.
Read video. Love the detail and hard work put into these that you do
That airplane top photo looks like he had full up elevator. Stalled on second low go around as it happens in VFR many times. Low go around stall again ?
Excellent analysis of the fatal crash . It seems like the two pilots were very young not to imply that they lacked proficiency. I believe rest after landing at Vegas will become more of a focus in the accident investigation since both approaches were almost identical. Thanks for your insightful analysis.
Very well done on the analysis, definitely human error from the start, fatigue brings along miss judgment, sad for the families involved, every pilot needs to understand we are humans, would have been better to get to a hotel, sleep a few hours and then get back in the air. Let's learn from this horrible preventable accident. Thx for your very professional overview of the whole flight. Cheers
Reported on numerous pilot forums that the airplane had a Garmin 750 NAV/COMM.
A fog approach is not a difficult approach. No rain, turbulence, icing, etc. But it is the one which draws pilots into pushing mins. But at the time of the accident, it was still dark making the airport environment all more difficult to perceive at min or below.
Notably the runway does not have approach lighting system which under the circumstances could have resulted in confusing other misc lights with the runway end lights, esp in haze, extraneous lights can be very confusing and disorienting, the other thing is that haze or fog can cause distance/height estimation illusions as well as sometimes very bad back scatter (eg of landing lights). Getting a clearance so close to destination is itself hazardous as it (esp single pilot) means pilots(s) were likely not fully prepared for contingencies, prob did not have an alternate planned out, etc. F70 is also boxed in by hazardous terrain making low level maneuvering very hazardous at night. They should have planned back at Henderson - if missed, then we go to the relatively close by class C towered Ontario airport where they have landings light systems and long wide runways then Uber to destination. Also there can be a difference between fatigue and sleepiness - fatigue can usually be overcome but not sleepiness ; sleepiness is very bad, it facilitates confusion, hallucinations, and other cognitive/perceptual impairments.
I've had tule fog stop me at Hemet at night. I watched it coming in going from clear to fog in minutes. I didn't even attempt the approach and went to John Wayne and flew the ILS. Palm Springs has a great FBO and hotel rooms. It is very unlikely that Palm Springs wasn't clear.
if the general public knew that hired pilots were getting 2 hours of sleep at 0-dark anything, they would freak out.
Airport landing lighting should also be taken into consideration.
A ceiling is not a requirement for a minimum. In either part 91 or part 135. You may prspeed as long as you have the required visibility At the final approach fix. Additionally you may descend below decision height with any of the items listed visible.
When a safe landing is in question, the better judgment or common sense kicks in, above any regulations or protocols. Can you do it safely or not ? That is the question. Gambling does not come to mind. These pilots may have experienced some physical impairment. We see a lot of it, right now. It is the elephant in the room.
@@linanicolia1363 That would be for the sunday flyer. You have to take a look as a pro pilot. Either that or you get fired. They just goofed what can I say.
I havent heard/seen any intel on the crew's duty & rest times, but the flight was conducted right in the midst of typical/normal circadian low
Fedex and UPS pilots operate during those hours every single night, mostly without issue. So I don’t think there is a strong argument that the pilots were negligent to fly in the circadian window. It will all depend on their fatigue mitigation strategies and how long their duty day prior was.
@@RobtheAviator Hi Rob, I wasnt suggesting the pilots were "negligent" re the timing of their flight - i was only stating that that was a potential & insidious hazard that was not identified in the AOPA video. We may likely never know whether it/fatigue was a factor in the ax. But its important for all pilots to recognize the potential hazard, and adopt defenses to mitigate it.
@@michaelh8890 I agree!
Lots of excellent comments and insights.
I’m sure the NTSB will look at fatigue. Hours of continuous wakefulness and circadian rhythm are likely to play a significant factor in their analysis.
Another very important issue is the illusions that can lure a pilot to continue descent below minimums. A few lights here and there at night can lead to disorientation, or can be misinterpreted as the runway environment.
Further, a Part 91 operation with young pilots would seem to have a very high risk profile. These kids want to please the boss, and are likely have very little experience and conviction to challenge the pressure that they had to complete the mission.
Yes, they took a human factors person in the go team. My husband is part of this go team. He handles the atc part.
Do we know if this young pilot had a boss? The pilot, Riese Lenders opened an LLC on July 22 titled "RCL Aviation" seems to be in his name and he is the only contact listed. Could he have been flying under his own company with a co-pilot and therefore had more freedom to make the decisions for this flight?
@@haygoon5677 I read an interview with the owner of this jet. IIRC, The 32(?) year old pilot was his well respected employee of two years. He made no reference to the 25 year old individual-
The 32 year old ( I don’t recall his name, hence my use of his age) called his boss and asked him if it would be ok if he flew a few friends to Las Vegas…The owner/boss agreed, and here we are.
Obviously he didn’t share the full details of his agreement with his employee, but that was the basic explanation of how the trip came to exist…RIP to those folks, and comfort to their family and friends.
@@FIGGY65 I know, interesting part of the story, right? Who knows what kind of relationship/arrangement this pilot had with the owner of the plane? A finders fee? Employee discount? Job perk? “Get out there and sell sell sell !” ?
Of note: part 135 turbojet charter requires the PIC to hold an ATP, so with a commercial, so it would have had to operate 91
My money is that someone onboard, who was in a position of power, insisted that they land and take off with minimal rest, and insisted that they land at French Valley, regardless of weather, due to convenience. There are people out there that think that thier convenience trumps realities like weather and crew rest. And they will intimidate pilots into doing things they would not normally do. I'd bet this was one of those cases.
It was the plane owner and friends, which debunks your theory.
Flying an approach with Wx reported below mins is nerve racking, exciting and gratifying; all at the same time. I fly in FL where you hardly get good IMC. I had to fly an ILS approach into VDF with Wx reported below mins to pick up an Angel Flight. My Mooney is equipped with 80’s steam gauges but at least an HSI. While intercepting, I thought about that Mooney the got stuck in the power-lines during an approach. So while stablished, I laser focused on those gauges, kept those needles in the center and only looked up right at min and thankfully saw the threshold. I do do practice a lot of approaches with home sim. Even if it’s as simple as Xplane in an ipad, besides keeping current, I think it does help.
Good analysis, but that limitation does not mean it was there first type rating, it means they did not complete their single pilot course for the CE525. The limitation you are referring to is worded slightly differently and is found in 61.64F2
It looks like a stacking of factors that led to this horrific outcome.
Like always....
Thank you for sharing great information for our Aviation Industry.
There was another crash at F70 in the week prior
4 days prior at take off
Another bad pilot
Based on what's shown in google earth pics and where the aircraft crashed, this might be a case of chasing lights that ended up not being the runway lights. This runway didn't have strobe approach lights, the runway lights aren't high intensity, there's a large building with parking lot lights right near where they crashed. The fact that they left Vegas in the middle of the night is a pretty good indicator that their passengers wanted to get back to French Valley before the morning, so it seems reasonable to believe this played a major role in their attempt to get in despite the fog, especially knowing it was likely the fog would burn off just a few hours later. Such a waste of life and yet another example of terrible decision making that takes so many lives.
This is also Dan Gryder’s take and I completely agree. They most likely saw the warehouse lights and pushed the nose over to duck under the layer into vmc conditions.
@@bwalker4194 I also agree with Dan Gryder, combined with pressure to land at French valley, (was the boss on the flight?) pushed the young pilot into a bad decision.
It isn’t clear to me whether the REILs were on or not , but in those approach conditions they’d be the only guaranteed proof of runway threshold for the pilot ; not a situation I’d want to be in.
@@bwalker4194 Dan Gryder is unprofessional and disrespectful in the amount of speculation and jumping to conclusions he is prone to do. He gets a lot of views though so I guess it’s worth it, right?
The impact location was about 600 ft or so north of the runway, and about 50 lower in elevation than the start of the runway. Additionally, the impact location had higher obstacles like power lines just a bit further north, which may suggest they had a very steep rate of decent. They very well could have been chasing the RV lot lights north of the runway, mistakenly thinking it was the lights at the start of the runway. I am curious what the NTSB findings will be with the CVR.
flying an approach below minimums requires exceptional crew stupidity
How much consideration is given to the age and level of experience?
The “I can handle this situation” mixed with less experience, age where the risk side of the brain is less developed and toss in fatigue = a recipe that results in a very sad outcome.
Great first look at a sad ending.
The beast flight crash analyst out there! Thank you for your outstanding job!
Is it that unusual to go missed then go for a second try? Maybe after 2 fails you'd think about your alternate but 1 failed doesn't mean immediately go to alternate?
Can anyone explain why some pilots cancel IFR? Why not just keep flying IFR even when under VFR conditions?
I wonder that, too. Happened with some people my husband knew at work. Pilot turned off IFR, then found a mountain.
Pilots sometimes cancel IFR so that they can make a more direct (quicker) approach to the airport. This assumes the field is VMC (good visibility). If you stay IFR then you will either have to fly the whole instrument procedure or be vectored to the approach and this can take longer than going directly to the airport.
He should have picked out an alternate airport. He was hopeful to the max, thinking he could beat that poor visibility. Bad move. He had evidently plenty fuel to go elsewhere as he burned up after he crashed. Very sad, for the families.
Good briefing. The CVR will be very helpful, if recovered. Fatigue has to be a major contributing factor, especially before the first flight. Pressure from someone in the cabin may factor in. Who flew the second approach? Interesting to see how the cheese matches up here.
IF the panel is like the one shown, is there even a way to couple the waas gps to that HSI? if not how could you shoot an lpv approach with vertical guidance? Either way the vertical profile of neither approach looked like a step down nor a glideslope derived approach profile. JMO
Sure there is. It is done all the time. The question is whether the airplane was equipped with a WAAS GPS
Very good initial analysis, thank you ! Given ,25 yr old PIC
Trying to fool Mother Nature ! New pilot trying to keep the boss happy ! Let’s go a little lower on the second approach!
I’ve seen it over and over !
( True Safety Is No Accident )
God Bless all the families involved ! Hart Broken Captain Mark H Wirth
Richard, I know you kept saying why would they fly the 2nd approach, but my question is Why would they fly the first approach is minimums are not met? I mean the first approaches is just dogging me as to why even try it in those conditions?
The biggest question for me is not the second attempted approach but rather why would anyone choose to cancel IFR. I realize they picked up a IFR clearance again prior to both approaches but why cancel in the first place. Even if the weather would of been VFR, they were still flying at night in a mountainous area. That to me is more concerning than the second attempt to land.
Curious why they canceled IFR 20 minutes out? Awos-3 with phone number, includes ceilings, vis, altimeter etc. Why not call awos-3 before cancel IFR? Might not have current altimeter which could effect baro mins. Adsbexchange should have pretty accurate gps altitudes flown.
Too early to speculate on why they shot the approach a second time, fatigue, etc. My experience has been that a lot of times you see the field on the miss and get suckered in to thinking you can delay the GA call by a second and there you’ll be. Doesn’t always work out that way. Also not sure where they were on FOB.
I'll just about guarantee that. The person who wasn't flying the first time flew the approach on the second. Give me a chance he said... Watch this.
Yeah , too easy with shallow layers of ground fog to see the runway and surroundings vertically , and get deceived into thinking that forward visibility once horizontally inside it with landing lights on should be possible to land , but end up not being able to see diddly.
@@davidwhite8633you can see the lights from 50ft above, but you won't see squat in the beam of light.
The box on the top of the approach chart says that if the local altimeter setting is not available, then the approach minimums increase.
F70 has a 24 hour operating AWOS that provides altimeter.
Hmmm, for starters operating VFR in IMC. Respectfully, I see implications to return to this field before a deadline impacted multiple personal and professional decisions during this operation.
My heart goes out to those affected by this tragedy.
I’d like to know even if the runway was missed was it possible to still land safely? They landed in a field, can’t Cessnas do that? Was it too sharp of a descent?
Well now, let's check it out...
Little or no crew rest. Get theiritis once again has played a factor.
Saw images and bieard a lot of lights just short of runway may have been mistaken for strip lights.
Does ground proximity alarms turn off automatically when plane in landing mode?
Article says the pilot earned his cert in April. I know they have to learn sometime but yikes I wouldn't want to be flying an early morning flight in a mountainous region in foggy conditions with a pilot who just earned his cert.
Did they fly to the Island of Mishap Aircraft ?
Any info on a King Air mishap in Libby Montana?
When I was getting typed in the XLS the instructor said “Part 91……a license to kill your self “
Another possibility is that their GDl system wasn't interfacing with the airport's CFT guidance system. Just a thought...
Great video . There are many tragic factors which you covered so well . Approach lights could have helped, however there are many factors here. Unfortunately I feel there may have been pressure to get in .