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Night Over Mountains

Engine failure at night over mountainous terrain is one of the things that keeps us up late. Here’s why. 

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • Flying single-engine aircraft at night over mountainous terrain, especially in instrument conditions, presents extreme risks due to limited visibility and lack of suitable emergency landing sites in case of engine failure.
  • A fatal accident described in the article confirms these risks, where a pilot died after a catastrophic engine failure (oil starvation) at night over mountains.
  • To mitigate these dangers, pilots should prioritize flying during daylight, maintain higher altitudes, and strategically plan routes over lower terrain or along valleys/highways that offer more emergency landing options, even if it means a less direct path.
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My first for-real IFR flight after earning my instrument rating involved flogging a Skyhawk from the DC area to Asheville, N.C. It was at night, over the Appalachian Mountains, along V222, in IMC. The headwinds were stiff enough that I was obliged to stop into Hickory, N.C., for fuel and a bathroom.

Refreshed, with an empty bladder and full tanks, we lifted off into a pitch-black sky. We literally saw nothing until maneuvering for the approach into KAVL. I was younger then and considered myself bulletproof. And not without some reason: I was painfully current on instruments, knew the route well and had confidence in the airplane, which I’d flown a good bit before this trip.

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