Pinnacle Airlines Flight 3701

Pinnacle Airlines Flight 3701

A Northwest Airlink CRJ-200 similar to the one involved.
Accident summary
Date October 14, 2004 (2004-10-14)
Summary Engine flameout, pilot disregard for procedure
Site Jefferson City, Missouri, United States
Passengers 0
Crew 2
Fatalities 2
Injuries (non-fatal) 0
Survivors 0
Aircraft type Bombardier CRJ-200
Operator Pinnacle Airlines
Registration N8396A

Pinnacle Airlines Flight 3701 (ICAO: FLG3701, IATA: 9E3701, or Flagship 3701) crashed on October 14, 2004, near Jefferson City, Missouri, United States. It was an overnight repositioning flight with no passengers from Little Rock, Arkansas, U.S. to Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport, U.S. Both crew members were killed.

Accident

Pinnacle Airlines (operating under the Northwest Airlink banner) Flight 3701 was an empty 50-seat Bombardier CRJ-200 ferrying from Little Rock, Arkansas (Little Rock National Airport) to Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport, manned by two pilots, Captain Jesse Rhodes and First Officer Peter Cesarz. The jet crashed when the engines could not be restarted and they failed to glide to an airport. There were no casualties on the ground.

Both pilots were trained at Gulfstream Academy in Florida, eventually hired on with Pinnacle Airlines after their time spent with Gulfstream International Airlines.[1] The airframe that crashed, number #7396 off of the assembly line, was built in 2000 and had accumulated 10,168 airframe hours and had completed 9,613 flight cycles (a flight cycle is defined as a takeoff and landing).

Reposition flight

Due to urgent but routine maintenance, the aircraft was unavailable for a scheduled flight earlier in the day. As do many airlines, Pinnacle had a spare aircraft available, which it used. The aircraft involved in the accident was then required at Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport (MSP), where it would have been had it undertaken its originally scheduled flight. For this reason it was necessary to reposition the aircraft to MSP.

Investigation

The investigation into the accident focused mainly on information contained on the flight data recorder and the cockpit voice recorder. This is the official version of events as determined by that investigation.

The two pilots were exploring the performance limits of the empty CRJ-200 on the flight. The pilots decided to test the limits of the CRJ, and join the "410 Club," referring to pilots who pushed CRJs to their maximum approved altitude of Flight Level 410 (FL410, or 41,000 feet).

The accident sequence started when the pilots performed several non-standard maneuvers at 15,000 feet, including a pitch-up at 2.3g (23 m/s²) that induced a stall warning. They set the autopilot to climb at 500 ft/min to FL410. This exceeded the manufacturer's recommended climb rate at altitudes above FL380. In the attempt to reach FL410, the plane was pulled up at over 1.2g, and the angle of attack became excessive to maintain climb rate in the thinner upper atmosphere. After reaching FL410, the plane was cruising at 150 knots (280 km/h), barely above stall speed, and had over-stressed the engines.

The anti-stall devices activated while they were at altitude, but the pilots overrode the automatic nose-down that would increase speed to prevent stall. After four overrides, both engines experienced flameout and shut down. The plane then stalled, and the pilots recovered from the stall at FL380 while still having no engines. At that altitude, there were six airports within reach for a forced landing. This led the pilots to pitch nose down in an attempt to restart the engines, which requires a dive sharp enough to attain the required 300 kt for a windmill restart to make the blades in the turbines windmill at 10% N2 (turbine rotational speed). The captain did not take the necessary steps to ensure that the first officer achieved the 300-knot or greater airspeed required for the windmill engine restart procedure and then did not demonstrate command authority by taking control of the airplane and accelerating it to at least 300 knots.

The turbine blades expanded, however, contacting the honeycomb labyrinth seals and allowing the metal to scrape together when the engine overheated, with zero core rotation. When the engine is shut down at altitude, the core begins to cool and the stator, including the static Interstage Static Seal (ISS), contracts at a faster rate than the adjacent rotating parts in both the radial and axial direction because of its faster thermal time constant. The relative rate of cooling of the stator and rotor results in an alignment of the rotating seal knife-edges aft of the normal operating groove in the static seal. If the clearances are tight enough and the relative cooling rates are right, contact can occur between the static and rotating seal elements. The resulting stiction can temporarily prevent the rotor from turning when only the force of ram air is applied to the core. Air Turbine Starter (ATS) torque has been shown adequate to overcome this restriction (NTSB Accident Information Brief Update for October 29, 2004.) Thus, when the engine cooled, the assembly did not match anymore and the blades could not rotate freely. The crew ended the descent when they had reached 230 kt but neither engine core (N2) ever indicated any rotation during the entire descent. Since they were too high for an APU start, the ram air turbine (known as an "Air Driven Generator" on Bombardier products) was deployed to power the aircraft, and the crew donned oxygen masks as the cabin slowly depressurized due to loss of pressurization air from the engines.

The crew glided for several minutes and then tried to restart engines using the APU at 13,000 ft. This was again unsuccessful. They then declared to Air Traffic Control (ATC) that they had a single engine flameout. At this point they had four diversion airports available to them. They lost considerable altitude while continuing unsuccessfully to attempt to restart both the left engine (two times) and the right engine (two times) for over 14 minutes, using the emergency restart procedure. Despite their four auxiliary power unit-assisted engine restart attempts, the pilots were unable to restart the engines because their cores had locked. Without core rotation, recovery from the double engine failure was not possible. At this point, they finally declared to ATC that they had in fact lost both engines.

Unable to reach the assigned diversion airport, Jefferson City Memorial Airport, the pilots attempted to land on a lit road. However at 22:15 they crashed outside Jefferson City, Missouri, behind a row of houses (the 600 block of Hutton Lanetwo-and-a-half miles short of the airport), and the plane caught fire. Both pilots were killed. There was some damage to houses and a garage, but no one on the ground was hurt.

Aftermath

Pinnacle Airlines has restricted flights to a maximum of FL370. It has also changed its training program to include high altitude operations in ground school and simulator training. In addition, each crew is taken in the simulator up to FL410 and shown what the airplane did on the night Flight 3701 crashed.

The National Transportation Safety Board has determined from the Flight Data Recorder that the turbofan jet engine (General Electric CF34-3B1) engine 2 turbine was operating at 300 °C above the maximum redline temperature of 900 °C at 41,000 ft. Engine 1 HPT stayed 100 °C below the redline.

In its final Accident Report, the NTSB determined as the probable causes of the accident:

  1. the pilots' unprofessional behavior, deviation from standard operating procedures, and poor airmanship;
  2. the pilots' failure to prepare for an emergency landing in a timely manner, including communicating with air traffic controllers immediately after the emergency about the loss of both engines and the availability of landing sites;
  3. the pilots' improper management of the double engine failure checklist.[2]

Thomas Palmer, former manager of Pinnacle's training program, said about the crash. "It's beyond belief that a professional air crew would act in that manner."[3]

Media

This accident is featured in book 4 of the Darwin Awards.[4]

References

Coordinates: 38°32′57″N 92°8′36″W / 38.54917°N 92.14333°W / 38.54917; -92.14333

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