51 投票數 (4.56 平均) 和 35,416 浏览  

N117BG — - NTSB Identification: ATL07LA034.  Accident occurred Tues, Jan. 23, 2007 in Guntersville, AL  A/C: Greenhaw, William Lancair 360, registration: N117BG  Injuries: 1 Uninjured.    According to the pilot, while taxiing following a normal landing he smelled fiberglass and then observed smoke and fire coming from the engine cowling. He immediately stopped the airplane, and egressed. He said the airplane continued to burn. Examination of the airplane by an FAA Inspector found the airplane partially consumed by fire. Examination of the engine revealed that the fuel line from the fuel servo to the flow divider had melted from the connection at the fuel servo to the cylinder baffling. The hose was still connected to the flow divider and retained torque on the fitting. The hose was removed and examination provided that the approximately half of its original length had been burnt away or melted. Examination revealed that the hose was of non-aviation automotive origin and identified as SAE. The construction of the hose was of plastic with a vinyl outer coating. Examination of the fuel line fitting still attached to the fuel servo revealed threads in the socket were clean with no residual hose material present in the threads. There was a light amount of melted plastic on the outer end of the socket. The hose had not been properly assembled, thus allowing fuel to escape into the engine compartment.    The National Transportation Safety Board determines the probable cause(s) of this accident as follows:  Failure of an unapproved automotive fuel line installed by the owner/pilot mechanic which resulted in an engine fire during taxi after landing.
/images/icons/csMagGlass.png

N117BG —

提交时间:

NTSB Identification: ATL07LA034. Accident occurred Tues, Jan. 23, 2007 in Guntersville, AL A/C: Greenhaw, William Lancair 360, registration: N117BG Injuries: 1 Uninjured. According to the pilot, while taxiing following a normal landing he smelled fiberglass and then observed smoke and fire coming from the engine cowling. He immediately stopped the airplane, and egressed. He said the airplane continued to burn. Examination of the airplane by an FAA Inspector found the airplane partially consumed by fire. Examination of the engine revealed that the fuel line from the fuel servo to the flow divider had melted from the connection at the fuel servo to the cylinder baffling. The hose was still connected to the flow divider and retained torque on the fitting. The hose was removed and examination provided that the approximately half of its original length had been burnt away or melted. Examination revealed that the hose was of non-aviation automotive origin and identified as SAE. The construction of the hose was of plastic with a vinyl outer coating. Examination of the fuel line fitting still attached to the fuel servo revealed threads in the socket were clean with no residual hose material present in the threads. There was a light amount of melted plastic on the outer end of the socket. The hose had not been properly assembled, thus allowing fuel to escape into the engine compartment. The National Transportation Safety Board determines the probable cause(s) of this accident as follows: Failure of an unapproved automotive fuel line installed by the owner/pilot mechanic which resulted in an engine fire during taxi after landing.

Comments

Please log in or register to post a comment.

bjaygarber
that's not good!
John Van dyke
Lesson of the day, use real FAA approved parts.
shrudini
Wow.
动态日志
需要 N117BG 1998年以来的完整历史搜索吗? 现在购买,一小时内即可收到。
日期 机型 始发地 目的地 出发 到达 飞行时间
No Recent History Data
注册用户(注册免费而且快捷!)可以查看3 months的历史记录。 加入
 

登录

还没有帐户吗? 现在就注册(免费),设置诸多自定义功能、航班提醒等等!
您知道FlightAware航班跟踪是由广告支持吗?
通过允许展示来自FlightAware.com的广告,您可以帮助我们使FlightAware保持免费。我们努力使我们的广告保持相关性,同时不显突兀,以创造一流的体验。在FlightAware上将广告加入白名单快捷而简单,或者请您考虑选择我们的高级帐户.
退出