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Cautionary Tales

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The "Accident Briefs" feature analyzes NTSB preliminary reports to identify likely causes and educate pilots on accident prevention, often going beyond official probable causes.
  • Reports are selected based on their educational value, prioritizing recurring themes such as carburetor icing and issues encountered on first flights after maintenance.
  • The briefs also highlight "stupid pilot tricks" (e.g., tailwind takeoffs) and non-powerplant mechanical failures, demonstrating various scenarios and the importance of correct pilot action.
See a mistake? Contact us.

Each month, we sort through scores of recent NTSB preliminary accident reports to develop our Accident Briefs feature, which begins on page 19 this month. We don’t use all of them—there’s never enough space—so many prelims don’t make the cut. It might be helpful for readers if we explain how we decide which ones to publish.

We start with the premise that we’re trying to prevent accidents and educate readers on how and why they occur. Only rarely has the NTSB assigned a probable cause to each recent month’s collection of mishaps, so we dive into the narrative to identify a likely reason. The idea is that understanding how something happened can help the majority of us avoid repeating it. So, we typically exclude taildragger groundloops, agricultural operations and rotorcraft right off the bat. So, yes, there’s some selection bias: A relatively successful off-field landing without injuries probably won’t make the cut. But there are some themes we hammer on.

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