At about 13:51 Alaska standard time, a Cessna 172 was damaged while landing at the Bethel Airport. The pilot was not injured. The pilot told investigators that she had departed the accident airport under a special VFR clearance and encountered severe icing conditions. At that time she elected to return to the Bethel airport. She said that forward visibility was restricted due to heavy ice build-up on the airplanes windscreen, requiring her to do a series of S turns to find the airport. She reported that just prior to touchdown the airplane stalled and the airplane landed hard in a nose low attitude. I just got into icing conditions. Thats what caused it, she said.
Jan. 10, Bethel, Alaska / Cessna 172 Skyhawk
At about 13:51 Alaska standard time, a Cessna 172 was damaged while landing at the Bethel Airport. The pilot was not injured. The pilot told investigators that she had departed the accident airport under a special VFR clearance and encountered severe icing conditions. At that time she elected to return to the Bethel airport. She said that forward visibility was restricted due to heavy ice build-up on the airplanes windscreen, requiring her to do a series of S turns to find the airport. She reported that just prior to touchdown the airplane stalled and the airplane landed hard in a nose low attitude. I just got into icing conditions. Thats what caused it, she said....
Key Takeaways:
- A Cessna 172 was damaged during a hard, nose-low landing at Bethel Airport, with the pilot reporting no injuries.
- The incident was caused by severe icing conditions encountered shortly after takeoff under a special VFR clearance, which severely restricted forward visibility due to ice on the windscreen.
- The pilot had to perform S-turns to find the airport and reported that the airplane stalled just prior to touchdown, leading to the hard landing.
See a mistake? Contact us.
