At about 16:47 eastern time, a Cessna 172N suffered a collapsed nose gear while attempting a landing on a road near Cojimar. The student pilot received minor injuries. The flight had originated from Marathon, Fla., at about 15:30. The student had made three touch and goes and the instructor signed him off for his first supervised solo. The instructor said the student entered a left traffic pattern for a return landing on runway 7, but the student then reported on the radio that he could not fly the airplane, that his hands were cold, and that he did not know what was wrong. On final approach at about 200 feet, the airplane broke off the approach, turned to the southwest and disappeared from sight. A U.S. Navy airplane made visual contact with the airplane but did not make radio contact. The flight continued into Cuban airspace.
July 31, Cojimar, Cuba / Cessna Skyhawk
At about 16:47 eastern time, a Cessna 172N suffered a collapsed nose gear while attempting a landing on a road near Cojimar. The student pilot received minor injuries. The flight had originated from Marathon, Fla., at about 15:30. The student had made three touch and goes and the instructor signed him off for his first supervised solo. The instructor said the student entered a left traffic pattern for a return landing on runway 7, but the student then reported on the radio that he could not fly the airplane, that his hands were cold, and that he did not know what was wrong. On final approach at about 200 feet, the airplane broke off the approach, turned to the southwest and disappeared from...
Key Takeaways:
- A student pilot sustained minor injuries when the nose gear of his Cessna 172N collapsed during an attempted landing on a road near Cojimar.
- The incident occurred during his first supervised solo flight after the student reported on the radio that he could not fly the airplane and that his hands were cold.
- The flight, originating from Marathon, Florida, deviated from its intended landing and continued into Cuban airspace before the emergency landing attempt.
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