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N6797Y accident description

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Crash location 36.893333°N, 121.410278°W
Nearest city Hollister, CA
36.852455°N, 121.401602°W
2.9 miles away
Tail number N6797Y
Accident date 29 May 2004
Aircraft type Beech A36
Additional details: None

NTSB Factual Report

On May 29, 2004, at 1849 Pacific daylight time, a Beech A36, N6797Y, impacted terrain and a taxiway sign during an aborted takeoff from runway 24 at the Hollister Municipal Airport, Hollister, California. The airplane was registered to, and operated by, the pilot under the provisions of 14 CFR Part 91 as a personal flight. The private pilot and four passengers were not injured. The airplane was substantially damaged. The flight was originating at the time of the accident, and was destined for a private airstrip near Copperopolis, California. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed, and a flight plan had not been filed for the cross-country flight.

According to the pilot's written statement, she arrived at the airport at 1730 to prepare the airplane for the flight and conduct the preflight inspection. She provided a safety briefing to the passengers and started the engine. The pilot taxied to the run up area for runway 24 and completed "all pre-takeoff systems and settings" checks.

The pilot applied full throttle and "hard right rudder" for takeoff. Before the airplane reached the intersection of runway 24 and 31 (approximately halfway down the 3,150-foot runway), the control yoke "suddenly pushed back" on the pilot's left hand. The pilot's right hand was on the throttle control. The nose wheel lifted up off the ground and the pilot applied forward pressure on the control yoke while checking the airspeed indicator. The airspeed was in the "green" range. The pilot released "some of the pressure" on the yoke, the nose "pitched up abruptly, and the stall warning alarm went off." The pilot estimated that the airplane was 30-40 feet above the ground when this occurred.

The pilot pushed the nose down in "an attempt to gain airspeed," and the airplane banked to the left approximately 30 degrees. The pilot pulled the power back and aborted the takeoff, which resulted in a wings level attitude. The airplane was 50 feet above the ground at this point and to the left of runway 24. With the wings level, the pilot added full power again, which resulted in a left bank.

The pilot believed that "there was no chance for recovery" and elected to pull the power to idle. She instructed her passengers to brace themselves for the landing. The landing gear were still extended, and the pilot attempted to land on runway 13. The airplane impacted a taxiway sign with left aft end of the empennage. The pilot attempted to keep the airplane's nose up as long as possible as the airplane impacted the ground between runway 13 and the taxiway, a bale of hay, and a ditch. The propeller blades impacted the ground, and the airplane spun around 150 degrees before coming to rest upright. The pilot evacuated the passengers once the airplane came to a stop, and she shut down the electric and ignition systems.

The airplane sustained structural damage to the wings, landing gear, flaps, horizontal stabilizer, and elevator.

According to the pilot, she set the elevator trim to the setting recommended in the pilot's operating handbook (POH) prior to takeoff, which was 3 degrees nose up.

On June 3, 2004, a Federal Aviation Administration inspector examined the airplane and interviewed the pilot. The inspector stated that he looked the airplane over and found nothing wrong with it.

On July 6, 2004, an aircraft mechanic examined the airplane at the accident airport. According to the mechanic's written statement, he inspected the elevator trim rigging utilizing the Raytheon Aircraft Beech Bonanza maintenance manual (part number 36-590001-9A25). According to the mechanic's statement, "due to the extensive damage to the left elevator and trim tab, these control surfaces were disconnected and only the right side could be checked with accuracy." With the cockpit elevator trim tab control set on zero, the right elevator trim tab rigging should be tab up 1 +/- 0.5 degrees. However, the mechanic found the tab at 4.5 degrees tab down (nose up), which equated to the trim tab being 5.5 degrees different from what the cockpit indication depicted. The mechanic also found the trim tab stops to be out of tolerance. He determined that when the cockpit trim indicator was set in the green band, which is 3 to 6 degrees for normal takeoff, the trim tab would actually be set to about 8 to 11 degrees in the nose up direction.

At the time of the accident, the airplane accumulated 1,735 hours of operation. Review of the aircraft maintenance records revealed that the airplane underwent its last annual inspection on August 20, 2003, at an airplane total time of 1,654.7 hours. According to the annual inspection endorsement, a mechanic "checked lights, cables, pulleys, controls, and attach points." A maintenance entry dated January 15, 2003, indicated a mechanic "installed bushings and jack screws, and hardware as necessary to remove excessive free play from elevator trim tab system." There was no airplane total time associated with this entry; however, an endorsement made a month prior indicated that the airplane total time during a pre-buy inspection was 1,576.4 hours. On May 12, 2003, the airplane was primed and painted, and its current registration number was painted on the airplane. During the painting process, the flight controls were "removed and checked for proper balance in accordance with the aircraft's maintenance manual." No airplane time was associated with this endorsement; however, an endorsement made 7 days later indicated that the airplane had a total time of 1,628.3 hours.

Review of the airplane's POH revealed that the preflight inspection called for the pilot to "check" the control surfaces on the empennage; however, it does not elaborate on what is to be checked. The before takeoff checklist indicates that the pilot is to set the elevator trim tab to 3 degrees nose up (or 6 degrees nose up if only the front seats are occupied).

The Student Pilot's Flight Manual by William K. Kershner recommends that a pilot check the elevator trim tab during the preflight inspection to see what position it is set for (nose up vs. nose down). The manual also recommends that a pilot move the control wheel through its full range and to "look back at the elevators and check the elevator trim tab to see that it is neutral. Check the trim tab control setting in the cockpit to see that it coincides with the actual setting of the tab."

According to the pilot, she accumulated at total of 202.7 hours of flight time, of which 146.9 hours were accumulated in the A36.

NTSB Probable Cause

the pilot's inadequate preflight inspection which failed to detect the mis-rigged elevator trim system, and the pilot's delay in aborting the takeoff.

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