At about 1830 eastern time, a Cessna 172K struck trees during the takeoff roll from McCardle Farm Airport. The student pilot was not injured. The pilot said he applied full power and the airplane yawed left, departed the left side of the runway, went down an embankment, and struck several trees. The students last 90-day endorsement was approximately 1 year before the accident. He flew five to 10 hours a year, with the majority of his flying out of the accident airport. His last flight was in October 2002, when he flew about an hour, and completed five takeoff and landings at the accident airport. His last medical certificate was issued 3 years and 7 months before the accident.
April 27, Burnham, Pa. / Cessna 172
At about 1830 eastern time, a Cessna 172K struck trees during the takeoff roll from McCardle Farm Airport. The student pilot was not injured. The pilot said he applied full power and the airplane yawed left, departed the left side of the runway, went down an embankment, and struck several trees. The students last 90-day endorsement was approximately 1 year before the accident. He flew five to 10 hours a year, with the majority of his flying out of the accident airport. His last flight was in October 2002, when he flew about an hour, and completed five takeoff and landings at the accident airport. His last medical certificate was issued 3 years and 7 months before the accident....
Key Takeaways:
- A student pilot veered off the runway during takeoff in a Cessna 172K, striking trees but remaining uninjured.
- The pilot reported the aircraft yawed left after applying full power, causing it to depart the runway and go down an embankment.
- The student pilot was flying with both a 90-day solo endorsement that was approximately one year expired and a medical certificate that was over three years expired.
- His flight experience was minimal (5-10 hours annually), with his last flight occurring eight months prior to the accident.
See a mistake? Contact us.
