So we can all learn from this, I'm posting the NTSB preliminary report. Remember to keep above best glide, and keep coordinated when your engine loses power. Its better to find the best spot you can, and fly it all the way into the crash rather than banking and pulling up to far while trying to make a runway. An engine out situation should never escalate into a stall/spin. I was a proponent before, but now more so that students should be taught spin recovery in flight before being allowed to solo (though I assume the CFI had done this training before).
This is eerie, because the description of the engine sounds is exactly similar to what happend in my partial power loss out of SNA. I don't judge the flight school as a whole by this as it seemed like a small, but safety oriented operation. The chief pilot had a great no-BS attitude and emphasized standardized, structured training and safe practices when I talked to him on Saturday. The instructor seemed like a great guy too... very sad.
"On September 11, 2005, about 1545 Pacific daylight time, a Cessna 152, N6565L, collided with terrain at Lakewood, California. Aviation West Flight School was operating the airplane under the provisions of 14 CFR Part 91. The certified flight instructor (CFI) and the student pilot sustained fatal injuries; the airplane was destroyed. The local instructional flight departed Daugherty Field, Long Beach, California, and had been airborne about 1 minute. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed, and no flight plan had been filed. The approximate global positioning system (GPS) coordinates of the primary wreckage were 33 degrees 49.79 minutes north latitude and 118 degrees 976 minutes west longitude.
According to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the airplane departed runway 25 right at Daugherty Field. About 30 seconds later, the pilot reported poor climb performance, and requested to return to the airport.
Numerous witnesses observed the airplane. They reported that it was low, and appeared to be going slow. The engine maintained the same sound; it was not coughing, sputtering, or backfiring. It sounded like it was at a low rpm (revolutions per minute). They reported that the nose was up, the wings were rocking, and the tail was moving back and forth. The right wing then dropped about 90 degrees, and the nose went nearly straight down.
The airplane came to rest behind a building. The right wing was under a truck, and the truck's front left wheel was on top of the right horizontal stabilizer. The right side of the fuselage and the vertical stabilizer rested against the truck's front bumper. Fire consumed most of the cabin area."
As far as the sputtering engine, I wonder if it could have been water in the tanks or maybe the mixture was calibrated to rich in the engine (the suspected cause of my engine problem).