July 21, 1980: Scenic Airlines, Inc., Cessna 404 (N2683S) Grand Canyon, AZ
On July 21, 1980, Scenic Airlines Flight 306, a Cessna 404 Titan Ambassador (N2683S), commuter flight to Phoenix, Arizona was scheduled to depart the Grand Canyon National Park Airport at 4:45 PM. On board were seven passengers, one of which was Charles Calhoun, a commuting helicopter mechanic hopping a ride back home.
The pilot was Captain Richard T. Mirehouse, age 33. While in the United States Air Force, Mirehouse flew a variety of aircraft such as the Northrop T-38 and the General Dynamics F-111A. After being released from active duty in 1979, he was employed as a Boeing 707 Flight Engineer for Trans World Airlines, but was released from TWA five months later due to a pilot reduction furlough. It wasn't long before Mirehouse found employment with Scenic Airlines in April 1980 and was soon checked out in both the Cessna 402 and 404 aircraft. At the time of the accident, Captain Mirehouse had a total flight time of 2,474 hours, but only 50 hours of that experience was in the Cessna 404.
After a passenger delay, Scenic Airlines Flight 306 taxied from the ramp at 4:58 PM and was cleared for takeoff at 4:59 PM. Already running late and not wasting time, Captain Mirehouse pushed up both throttles and the turbo-charged engines roared to life as Flight 306 accelerated down Runway 21. With the landing gear and flaps up, Mirehouse made a slight left turn for Phoenix, but all was not well. Unknown to Mirehouse, his aircraft was trailing dark black smoke. Suddenly the left engine began losing power and the aircraft began losing altitude. The tower controller notified Mirehouse of the smoke and could see the plane descending in a nose high attitude just above the treeline. With the nose of his aircraft blocking the view of the fast approaching forest, Mirehouse knew he was seconds from a crash. He made a final radio call to the tower; "It looks like I'm gonna go down."
At 5:02 PM, Flight 306 began ripping through the treeline in a mixture of shattered metal and splintered branches. In seconds, a fireball rose from the forest consuming the aircraft and it's injured occupants. Help was quick to arrive in the form of a U.S. Forest Service firefighting aircraft. The Fairchild C-119, call sign T-36 was responding to a forest fire near Prescott and was the third aircraft to depart after Flight 306. The pilot asked for and received permission to drop two 1,000 pound loads of slurry onto the burning plane. The effort helped, but the fuel re-ignited and the plane continued to burn. Ground responders began to arrive after driving nearly half a mile through the dense forest.
When they arrived, the scene was utter devastation. The aircraft and surrounding forest was consumed in flame and yet through the chaos of it all, a voice was heard crying for help. It was Charles Calhoun, the commuting helicopter mechanic. Calhoun managed to open the cabin door and crawl his way through the searing flames. The victim was conscious and complained of very little pain, but with third degree burns covering over 98 percent of his body, Calhoun was in very critical condition. Just five days after the accident, Mr. Calhoun would succumb to his injuries in a Phoenix hospital. The only survivor of Scenic Airlines Flight 306 had died.
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HISTORICAL SUMMARY:
The crash site of Flight 306 was difficult to locate for a couple of reasons. The NTSB accident report gives several different locations for the accident site. One of which was nearly 10 miles from the actual site. The other factor that made the site difficult to locate was the fact that the flight crashed in densely forested terrain that has very few geographic landmarks. No aerial photographs were available and the few surface photos I found were useless in locating the site. Few people in the area remember the accident and those that I spoke with only remember it being somewhere in the forest and about three miles south of the airport.
It became apparent that this search would not be a solo effort and I incorporated a group of friends to help look for the crash site with me. We ended up using the grid method to locate the site based on the first responders witness statements. The method worked and after a few days of hiking the search grid, we found the crash site of Flight 306.
AIRCRAFT INVOLVED
The Cessna 404 Titan Ambassador was a development of the Cessna 402 with an enlarged vertical tail and other changes. The prototype first flew on February 26, 1975. It was powered by two 375 hp turbocharged GTSIO-520 engines manufactured by Continental Motors.
It was Cessna's largest twin piston-engined aircraft. In production between 1976 and 1982, a total of 378 Titans were built.During the accident investigation, the NTSB focused on the left engine that was trailing smoke.
This fractured exhaust valve guide from the number 5 cylinder exhibited progressive cracking before it failed. The NTSB suspected that the fractured valve guide probably damaged turbocharger's turbine wheel blades before the cylinder was replaced four days before the accident.
Scenic Airlines maintenance personnel failed to detect the damage to the turbocharger. (NTSB File Photo)On July 18, 1980, 3 days before the accident the airport manager for the Grand Canyon National Park Airport noticed N2683S emit large amounts of gray smoke from the left engine during ground operations. He reported the problem to Scenic's company station manager at Grand Canyon who reported the issue to company headquarters in Las Vegas.
The NTSB determined through it's investigation that the left engine turbocharger showed evidence of progressive cracking in the turbine wheel shaft. (NTSB File Photo)On January 21, 1981, the National Transportation Safety Board released the final report on the accident. (NTSB/AAR-81/02)
The Probable Cause:
The NTSB determines that the probable cause of the accident was a substantial loss of power from the left engine at a critical point in the takeoff and the failure of the pilot to establish a minimum drag configuration which degraded the marginal single-engine climb performance of the aircraft. The loss of power resulted from the seizure of the turbocharger following the progressive failure of the turbine wheel blades initiated by foreign object ingestion which had occurred previous to the accident flight and was not detected during maintenance on the engine four days before the accident.FLIGHT 306 CRASH SITE LOCATED
Walking along my second search grid and finding nothing but old beer cans was becoming discouraging.
After a couple of hours, I was about to call off the search for the day when we walked into a clearing and I looked down to find this fragment. Additional wreckage and the burned trees nearby confirmed that we had found the crash site.These two small fragments are part of the display from the aircraft's attitude indicator. In this case, the aircraft had two attitude indicators. Finding one of these fragile flight instrument components is rare, but both is unbelievable.
The NTSB's accident report notes that the flight instruments provided no useful information and were un-readable during the investigation.