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N411MD accident description

Indiana map... Indiana list
Crash location 39.936666°N, 86.052777°W
Nearest city Fishers, IN
39.955593°N, 86.013873°W
2.4 miles away
Tail number N411MD
Accident date 19 May 2007
Aircraft type Piper PA 46-350P
Additional details: None

NTSB Factual Report

On May 19, 2007, about 1305 eastern daylight time, a Piper PA 46-350P, N411MD, piloted by a private pilot, sustained substantial damage when the nose landing gear collapsed during landing on runway 15 (3,850 feet by 100 feet) at the Indianapolis Metropolitan Airport (UMP), near Fishers, Indiana. The personal flight was operating under 14 CFR Part 91. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed at the time of the accident. No flight plan was on file. The pilot and passenger reported no injuries. The flight originated from the Marion Municipal Airport, near Marion, Indiana, at 1250 and was destined for UMP.

In his accident report, the pilot stated that he crossed the "fence" at 90 knots and touched down on the main landing gear in the center of the runway. He said that the landing was soft on the mains. He said:

We rolled out 200-300-feet, in typical controlled manner. I then

lightly applied toe brake pressure to slowdown the aircraft. ... Upon

light toe brake pressure, we felt snap, and collapse of nose gear

resulting in swerve to [left] of centerline - power setting was at

IDLE when this occurred.

A witness observing the landing at the fixed base operator at UMP, in part, stated:

I observed a low wing single engine aircraft flying down final to

runway 15 at Indianapolis Metropolitan Airport (KUMP). The

approach and touchdown looked normal. The aircraft touched

down within one or two centerline markings from the approach end

numbers. The aircraft rolled out 200 to 300 yards and appeared to

be decelerating with no problems. At that point what I believe to be

smoke started to come from the nose wheel tire. The aircraft

continued on for a short distance, at that time the nose gear collapsed

and the propeller made contact with the runway surface. The plane

slid maybe another 100 yards before coming to a stop on the left side

of the runway. All Wheels were still on the runway surface and I did

not see the aircraft make contact with anything else. Two people

climbed out of the aircraft and waited for help to arrive. They did not

appear to be injured.

Federal Aviation Administration Inspectors and an air safety investigator from Piper Aircraft Inc. examined the airplane. The examination of the engine mount revealed a separation of the right attachment foot that held an end of the nose landing gear actuator. The Piper investigator reported that the engine mount was of a "new" one-piece foot design.

N411MD, a 2000, PA-46-350P, serial number 4636262, was an all-metal airplane with semimonocoque fuselage and empennage construction. The airplane's last annual inspection was conducted on December 14, 2006. A logbook endorsement showed that the airplane Hobbs meter indicated 739.6 hours at the time of that inspection and that the new design engine mount, part number 89137-041, was installed on March 21, 2003, at a Hobbs meter reading of 229.8. The pilot reported that the airplane's total time at the time of the accident was 772 hours.

The nose landing gear's tire and rim were sent to the tire manufacturer for examination under Federal Aviation Administration supervision. The examination revealed no pre-impact anomalies or under inflation.

The engine mount was removed and was sent to the National Transportation Safety Board's Materials Laboratory. A materials research engineer examined the mount and produced Materials Laboratory Factual Report 07-098. That report, in part, stated:

The upper aft part of the right nose gear actuator attachment foot fractured

away from the rest of the engine mount. ... The fracture at the forward edge

of the [right] foot had relatively smooth features on flat planes and showed

curved crack arrest markings consistent with fatigue cracking from multiple

origins. The fatigue cracking was evident over an arc of approximately

90 degrees; at its deepest penetration, the fatigue crack had propagated

through approximately 90 percent of the estimated 0.07-inch wall thickness

of the foot. ... No cracks were observed in the joint where the left attachment

foot was joined to the support tubes.

NTSB Probable Cause

The fatigue separation of the engine mount's nose gear actuator attachment foot during landing.

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