At approximately 1745 central time, a Cessna 150 lost partial engine power and crashed during the ensuing forced landing near Fort Worth. The pilot was not injured. The pilot said he was climbing through 50 feet agl when he noticed the engine starting to lose power. He continued to climb and flew a traffic pattern, turning to downwind at about 200 feet agl. He elected to land in a field ahead of him about a half-mile east of the runway. An FAA inspector reported the mixture control rod had separated from the carburetor.
June 07, Fort Worth, Texas / Cessna 150
At approximately 1745 central time, a Cessna 150 lost partial engine power and crashed during the ensuing forced landing near Fort Worth. The pilot was not injured. The pilot said he was climbing through 50 feet agl when he noticed the engine starting to lose power. He continued to climb and flew a traffic pattern, turning to downwind at about 200 feet agl. He elected to land in a field ahead of him about a half-mile east of the runway. An FAA inspector reported the mixture control rod had separated from the carburetor....
Key Takeaways:
- A Cessna 150 experienced partial engine power loss shortly after takeoff near Fort Worth, resulting in a forced landing in a field.
- The pilot, who was uninjured, initiated a traffic pattern before deciding to land after the engine began losing power at 50 feet AGL.
- An FAA inspection determined the cause of the power loss was the mixture control rod separating from the carburetor.
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