Thursday, 24 December 2020

 Another strange little (Bin Laden) coincidence:


Aviation enthusiast Geoff Pierce took this photograph of the aircraft moments before it crashed


Phil Giles, a former air accident investigator, said: "It suggests that the plane either landed too late or tried to take off again when the pilot realised it wasn't going to make the end of the runway.

"Or it may have been a problem with the brakes."


Eyewitnesses at the scene said there had been a "ball of flames" and "several explosions".

Bin Laden family on Blackbushe Airport crash plane

Published1 August 2015



Summary:

At the end of a routine flight, the aircraft entered the visual circuit to land on Runway 25 at Blackbushe. A number of TCAS alerts occurred while flying in the circuit, and the pilot manoeuvred the aircraft until it was significantly higher and faster than normal for a visual approach. Following several TAWS alerts, the aircraft crossed the runway threshold 43 kt above the target threshold speed .

The aircraft floated before touching down and overran the runway end. It collided with an earth bank, and then cars in a car park, causing the wing to separate and a fire to start. The four occupants were fatally injured.

Several factors combined to create a very high workload for the pilot. This may have saturated his mental capacity, impeding his ability to handle new information and adapt his mental model, leading him to become fixated on continuing the approach.

Bulletin Correction

A correction was issued on the online version of this report on 12 January 2017.

Embraer EMB-505 Phenom 300, HZ-IBN Correction 02-17

Download amended report:

Embraer EMB-505 Phenom 300, HZ-IBN 12-16

Special Bulletin

A Special bulletin was published concerning this accident on 6 August 2015.

Special Bulletin S2/2015

Download glossary of abbreviations:

Glossary of abbreviations

Published 8 December 2016


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