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N4232H accident description

Idaho map... Idaho list
Crash location 42.245000°N, 113.879445°W
Nearest city Oakley, ID
42.243245°N, 113.881959°W
0.2 miles away
Tail number N4232H
Accident date 30 Sep 2002
Aircraft type Mooney M20J
Additional details: None

NTSB Factual Report

On September 30, 2002, approximately 1630 mountain daylight time, the wings of a Mooney M20J, N4232H, collided with mail boxes mounted on steel posts during the landing roll after the pilot successfully executed a forced power-off landing on a country road. The private pilot and his passenger were not injured, but the aircraft, which is owned and operated by the pilot, sustained substantial damage. The 14 CFR Part 91 personal pleasure flight, which departed Walker Field, Grand Junction, Colorado, about two hours earlier, was being operated in visual meteorological conditions. The ELT was not activated.

According to the pilot, while en route, the aircraft began to lose oil pressure and eventually the propeller failed to respond correctly to the movement of the propeller rpm governor control lever. Eventually the oil pressure dropped to zero, and the pilot elected to make an emergency landing on a country road. Although the pilot was able to maneuver the aircraft to a successful touchdown on the road he selected, during the landing roll, the wings of the aircraft collided with mail boxes situated immediately adjacent to the edge of the road.

A post-accident inspection of the engine revealed that both compression rings on the number four piston had fractured, and a 3/8 inch wide section of the piston surface had been eroded away. The eroded area extended from the land of the bottom compression ring, through the land of the top compression ring, to within 1/16 inch of the piston dome. The depth of the erosion was approximately 1/8 inch (level with the bottom surface of the ring land). In addition, according to the FAA inspector who looked at the engine after the number four cylinder was removed, except for a small residual amount, the engine had lost all of its oil supply, and the number three connecting rod bearing was beginning to extrude from between the rod end and the crankshaft journal. The investigation also revealed that the number four cylinder exhaust pipe was contaminated with both oily soot and a coating of unburned oil. In addition, the fuselage skin in the area aft of the exhaust pipe for the number two and number four cylinders was coated with what appeared to be relatively fresh oil.

NTSB Probable Cause

Failure (fracture) of the two number four piston compression rings, leading to the erosion of a section of the piston sidewall, resulting in the exhaustion of the engine's oil supply during cruise flight, followed by a forced landing on a country road. Factors include mail boxes mounted on metal poles immediately adjacent to the side of the road.

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