September 20, 1996: Scenic Airlines, Inc., Cessna T207A (N6468H) Arizona Strip near Littlefield, AZ
ACCIDENT SYNOPSIS:
On September 20, 1996, a Cessna T207A (N6468H) operated by Scenic Airlines was being re-positioned from Grand Canyon Airport in Arizona to St. George, Utah. The flight was conducted at night over mountainous terrain and without passengers.
The flight was apparently uneventful, but for reasons unknown the pilot initiated a decent for landing and continued the decent below the mountainous terrain. The airplane collided with the top of a 4,600 foot bluff killing the pilot, Norman B. Moore.
The NTSB examination of the accident site revealed a 567-foot long wreckage path, oriented along the direct course line from the departure point to the destination. Damage to the engine and propeller indicated that the engine was developing power at impact. The medical investigation revealed that the pilot had a history of transient global amnesia.
The radar track information revealed a steady and constant decent and track across the ground which would have been consistent with the pilot controlling the aircraft throughout the flight (The aircraft was not equipped with an autopilot system). The cause of the accident was never determined, but theories include a sudden debilitating medical condition to just simply falling asleep during the gradual decent into the St. George Airport.
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HISTORICAL SUMMARY:
The accident aircraft involved is familiar to me from my time woking for Lake Powell Air Service/Scenic Airlines. For a Cessna 207, it was a good flying aircraft as I remember. Sometime during 1995 or 1996 the aircraft was re-painted into the then current Scenic Airlines livery.
At the time of the accident I was living in Hurricane, Utah, so visiting this accident site was a simple process of locating the crash site from the air and a few days later driving about 15 miles south of St. George across the Utah/Arizona state-line. The afternoon I visited the crash site, a helicopter had already salvaged the large pieces of wreckage and engine. All that remained was bits of window plexiglass and thin pieces of crushed aluminum. Common debris found in accidents involving general aviation aircraft. The debris that set this accident apart was the many pages of the pilot's Scenic Airlines Operation Manual scattered across the mesa.
First contact with the mesa was found in the form of propeller contact marks on some boulders. The aircraft than made a series of hard cartwheeling impacts along a line of about 600 feet before coming to a rest. There was no evidence of fire at the crash site.
Since my visit, a memorial was placed at the site using lava rocks in the shape of a large heart. In the center spelled out with smaller stones was a message left by a family member "We love you dad".
Read MoreOn September 20, 1996, a Cessna T207A (N6468H) operated by Scenic Airlines was being re-positioned from Grand Canyon Airport in Arizona to St. George, Utah. The flight was conducted at night over mountainous terrain and without passengers.
The flight was apparently uneventful, but for reasons unknown the pilot initiated a decent for landing and continued the decent below the mountainous terrain. The airplane collided with the top of a 4,600 foot bluff killing the pilot, Norman B. Moore.
The NTSB examination of the accident site revealed a 567-foot long wreckage path, oriented along the direct course line from the departure point to the destination. Damage to the engine and propeller indicated that the engine was developing power at impact. The medical investigation revealed that the pilot had a history of transient global amnesia.
The radar track information revealed a steady and constant decent and track across the ground which would have been consistent with the pilot controlling the aircraft throughout the flight (The aircraft was not equipped with an autopilot system). The cause of the accident was never determined, but theories include a sudden debilitating medical condition to just simply falling asleep during the gradual decent into the St. George Airport.
***********************************************************************************************************************************
HISTORICAL SUMMARY:
The accident aircraft involved is familiar to me from my time woking for Lake Powell Air Service/Scenic Airlines. For a Cessna 207, it was a good flying aircraft as I remember. Sometime during 1995 or 1996 the aircraft was re-painted into the then current Scenic Airlines livery.
At the time of the accident I was living in Hurricane, Utah, so visiting this accident site was a simple process of locating the crash site from the air and a few days later driving about 15 miles south of St. George across the Utah/Arizona state-line. The afternoon I visited the crash site, a helicopter had already salvaged the large pieces of wreckage and engine. All that remained was bits of window plexiglass and thin pieces of crushed aluminum. Common debris found in accidents involving general aviation aircraft. The debris that set this accident apart was the many pages of the pilot's Scenic Airlines Operation Manual scattered across the mesa.
First contact with the mesa was found in the form of propeller contact marks on some boulders. The aircraft than made a series of hard cartwheeling impacts along a line of about 600 feet before coming to a rest. There was no evidence of fire at the crash site.
Since my visit, a memorial was placed at the site using lava rocks in the shape of a large heart. In the center spelled out with smaller stones was a message left by a family member "We love you dad".