At 1130 Mountain time, the airplane collided with an airport perimeter fence during landing and nosed over. The Private pilot and three passengers were not injured; the airplane sustained substantial damage. Visual conditions prevailed. According to the pilot, while on final approach, the airplane began descending rapidly. The pilot retracted the flaps 10 degrees and applied full power, but the airplane continued to descend until it struck the airport perimeter fence and nosed over. According to the airport manager, approximately 35 gallons of fuel were drained from the airplane following the accident.
July 2, 2005, Yuma, Ariz. / Piper PA-28-180
At 1130 Mountain time, the airplane collided with an airport perimeter fence during landing and nosed over. The Private pilot and three passengers were not injured; the airplane sustained substantial damage. Visual conditions prevailed. According to the pilot, while on final approach, the airplane began descending rapidly. The pilot retracted the flaps 10 degrees and applied full power, but the airplane continued to descend until it struck the airport perimeter fence and nosed over. According to the airport manager, approximately 35 gallons of fuel were drained from the airplane following the accident....
Key Takeaways:
- An airplane nosed over after colliding with an airport perimeter fence during landing, resulting in substantial damage but no injuries to the private pilot or three passengers.
- The pilot reported that the aircraft began descending rapidly on final approach, and despite attempts to apply full power and retract flaps, it continued to descend until impact.
- The accident occurred under visual conditions, and approximately 35 gallons of fuel were drained from the airplane post-accident.
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