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N105NL accident description

Oregon map... Oregon list
Crash location 43.365556°N, 123.828056°W
Reported location is a long distance from the NTSB's reported nearest city. This often means that the location has a typo, or is incorrect.
Nearest city North Bend, OR
43.406501°N, 124.224280°W
20.1 miles away
Tail number N105NL
Accident date 28 Feb 2010
Aircraft type Schafer Starduster SA-300
Additional details: None

NTSB Factual Report

On February 28, 2010, about 1430 Pacific standard time, an experimental Schafer Starduster SA-300 experimental biplane, N105NL, impacted the terrain during a forced landing about 20 miles east of North Bend, Oregon. The commercial pilot, who was the sole occupant, received minor injuries, and the airplane, which was owned and operated by the pilot, sustained substantial damage. The 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 personal pleasure flight, which departed Roseburg, Oregon, about 20 minutes prior to the accident, was being operated in visual meteorological conditions. The pilot was en route to North Bend. No flight plan had been filed.

According to the pilot, he applied full carburetor heat about 10 minutes after departing Roseburg because of the humid ambient conditions. Then about 5 minutes later, the airplane's engine, a 220 horsepower Continental W670 radial, started to lose power. Although he was able to get it to temporarily accelerate by pumping the throttle, the rpm eventually slowed to idle. He therefore selected a nearby location where the forest had been clear-cut, and attempted a forced landing at that location. By the time he descended to the landing spot the propeller was wind-milling, but the engine was not producing any power. Because the surrounding area was heavily forested, the pilot was forced to make the landing in a clear-cut area of very rough hilly terrain that was covered with numerous branches and small logs. Immediately after the airplane touched down, it cartwheeled and then slid/rolled for about 100 feet.

During a post-accident inspection directed/monitored by a Federal Aviation Administration Airworthiness Inspector, the airplane's fuel system, ignition system, and air induction system were checked and partially disassembled. No anomalies where discovered, and there was no evidence of any malfunction that would have kept the engine from producing normal cruise power.

According to the pilot, who added fuel just prior to departure, the airplane's fuselage fuel tank contained about 28 gallons of fuel at the time he took off. He also stated that he had flown the airplane many times in the high humidity conditions found near the ocean, and that with the full application of carburetor heat; the airplane's carburetor had never accumulated ice in its throat.

The reported temperature and dewpoint (14 and 7 degrees C respectively) when plotted on a carburetor icing probability chart fell in the area annotated "Moderate Icing Cruise Power or Serious Icing Descent Power".

NTSB Probable Cause

The complete loss of engine power during cruise for undetermined reasons.

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