Missing 1900

Story Here: http://www.kathrynsreport.com/2013/03/beechcraft-1900-commercial-cargo-plane.html

ktuu-pilot-neil-jensen-20130309.jpg

The family of pilot Neil Jensen released this photo. Jensen, 21, was the copilot in a cargo plane crash near Dillingham. Crews found the wreckage on Mar. 9, 2013 and said the bodies of Jensen and Capt. Jeff Day, 38 of Anchorage, were recovered.
 
Don't know what to say, because there really is nothing one can say that helps. I didn't really know Neil at all and just saw some of his postings on here. He was so excited to have gotten this job up in Alaska. Seemed like a really decent guy. Terrible loss for everyone and I feel so badly for the crew's families, co-workers, friends and loved ones. Life is a crap shoot in so very many ways. Things can turn for the best or the worse or abruptly end in a heartbeat. All you can do is try your best to make a life worth living for yourself and those you care for. Very sorry to learn of this.

"We can lift ourselves out of ignorance, we can find ourselves as creatures of excellence and intelligence and skill. We can be free! We can learn to fly!"
- Richard Bach

May their souls be free and forever aloft.
 
Really sucks, RIP to the crew. It brings back the memories of all the folks I have known who lost their lives in this profession. :(
 
Very sad. If Neil's folks read this, be comforted in knowing he died doing something he loved and had a passion for.
 
21 yrs old and 38 yrs old. So young and so eager. May they fly with the angels and guide us as we continue our quests into the blue horizon. May they have tailwinds and blue skies for all eternity.

RIP Gentlemen.
 
http://www.ntsb.gov/aviationquery/brief.aspx?ev_id=20130308X64149&key=1


NTSB Identification: ANC13FA030
Nonscheduled 14 CFR Part 135: Air Taxi & Commuter
Accident occurred Friday, March 08, 2013 in Aleknagik, AK
Aircraft: BEECH 1900C, registration: N116AX
Injuries: 2 Fatal.

This is preliminary information, subject to change, and may contain errors. Any errors in this report will be corrected when the final report has been completed. NTSB investigators either traveled in support of this investigation or conducted a significant amount of investigative work without any travel, and used data obtained from various sources to prepare this aircraft accident report.
On March 8, 2013, about 0814 Alaska standard time, a twin-engine turboprop Beech 1900C airplane, N116AX, was destroyed when it impacted rising terrain about 10 miles east of Aleknagik, Alaska. The airplane was operated as Flight 51, by Alaska Central Express, Inc., Anchorage, Alaska, as an on-demand cargo flight under the provisions of 14 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 135. The airline transport certificated captain and the commercial certificated first officer sustained fatal injuries. Instrument meteorological conditions were reported in the area at the time of the accident, and the airplane was operating on an instrument flight rules (IFR) flight plan. The flight had originally departed Anchorage about 0544, and made a scheduled stop at King Salmon, Alaska, before continuing on to the next scheduled stop, Dillingham, Alaska.

According to Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) personnel, as the airplane approached Dillingham, the flight crew requested the RNAV GPS 19 instrument approach to the Dillingham Airport about 0757 from controllers at the Anchorage Air Route Traffic Control Center (ARTCC).
The ARTCC specialist on duty subsequently granted the request by issuing the clearance, with instructions to proceed direct to the Initial Approach Fix (IAF) to begin the approach, and to maintain an altitude of 2,000 feet or above. A short time later the flight crew requested to enter a holding pattern at the IAF so that they could contact the Flight Service Station (FSS) for a runway conditions report, and the ARTCC specialist granted that request. The ARTCC specialist then made several attempts to contact the aircraft, but was unsuccessful and subsequently lost radar track on the aircraft.

When the airplane failed to arrive at the Dillingham Airport, ARTCC personnel initiated a radio search to see if the airplane had diverted to another airport. Unable to locate the airplane, the FAA issued an alert notice (ALNOT) at 0835. Search personnel from the Alaska State Troopers, Alaska Air National Guard, and the U.S. Coast Guard, along with several volunteer pilots, were dispatched to conduct an extensive search effort.

Rescue personnel aboard an Air National Guard C-130 airplane tracked 406 MHz emergency locater transmitter (ELT) signal to an area of mountainous terrain about 20 miles north of Dillingham, but poor weather prohibited searchers from reaching the site until the next morning. Once the crew of a HH-60G helicopter from the Air National Guard's 210th Air Rescue Squadron, Anchorage, Alaska, reached the steep, snow and ice-covered site, they confirmed that both pilots sustained fatal injuries.

The closest official weather observation station is at the Dillingham Airport. At 0745, an aviation routine weather report (METAR) reported, in part: Wind from 100 degrees (true) at 17 knots with gusts to 30 knots; visibility, 7 statute miles in light rain; clouds and sky condition, 1,500 feet overcast; temperature, 34 degrees F; dew point, 34 degrees F; altimeter, 29.09 inHg.

On March 9, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigator-in-charge, along with an additional NTSB air safety investigator, and an FAA operations inspector from the Anchorage Flight Standards District Office (FSDO), examined the airplane wreckage at the accident site. A comprehensive wreckage examination and layout is pending following recovery efforts.


PADLRNAV19_zps636893ae.png
 
OMG that is giving me chills. Can anyone point out with reference to the approach plate, where they might have been coming from?
 
I agree with mikecweb on hoping that there is a misprint, but my initial gut feeling is that it's not. A real eye opener for me. I hope the controller wasn't thinking about FIXUV instead of ZEDAG when he gave the 2000 or above instructions.
 
OMG that is giving me chills. Can anyone point out with reference to the approach plate, where they might have been coming from?
Flightaware shows them on the east side of the plate on a 320 heading to what appears direct the IAF. The altitude and speed data, which is not very accurate, shows them in a >1500FPM descent to <2,200ft before radar was lost.
 
From King Salmon to ZEDAG, the hold entry would have put them right on the 2550 elevation marker. I guess this explains why Anchorage Center has been ultra formal the last few days. But one would think a chart brief should have caught the error or when the GPWS lit up. Though I did have Anchorage about do the same thing to me one night going into PAPG.
 
From King Salmon to ZEDAG, the hold entry would have put them right on the 2550 elevation marker. I guess this explains why Anchorage Center has been ultra formal the last few days. But one would think a chart brief should have caught the error or when the GPWS lit up. Though I did have Anchorage about do the same thing to me one night going into PAPG.

I have a feeling that if this is, in fact, a CFIT accident and they did, in fact, have GPWS, that Neil would be explaining to us about how he is still looking for a way to remove the seat cushion.

I doubt they had GPWS, or they would have saw this coming.
 
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