Something going on around DC

IF the O2 switch was set to Normal, the rear bags should have dropped around 13,000’ cabin altitude. Although I wonder if they could make it up into the cockpit to help an unconscious pilot. Maybe it was a rapid event.

was single pilot confirmed?
 
Re: hypoxia. The TUC charts are interesting. At FL300, TUC is measured in low-to-mid double digit seconds. Within 90 seconds, most everyone is going to be unconscious. If it’s a rapid d event, cut those times in half. The crappy part about a non-rapid decompression is similar to the crappy par of losing situational awareness; you don’t know you’ve lost it until it’s past gone, so the equation becomes how long are you gone for before you can’t come back. You have to descend below 10K cabin altitude before you really start your way out being unconscious if you’re not on supplemental O2.


Starved of O2 long enough, you won’t come back. It’s not out of the realm of possibility the occupants were dead before the descent began.
 
Starved of O2 long enough, you won’t come back. It’s not out of the realm of possibility the occupants were dead before the descent began.

Assuming that it was hypoxia I would also assume that everyone was unconscious very shortly after the time ATC lost communication with them.
 
If the pax got their masks on, but the pilot didn’t, and obviously no descent was initiated, the pax really can’t do much because they are tethered to their seats in order to breathe.
 
If the pax got their masks on, but the pilot didn’t, and obviously no descent was initiated, the pax really can’t do much because they are tethered to their seats in order to breathe.

and what's the typical runtime of pax o2 ?
 
One time line that I have heard is that the pilot failed to respond when the plane leveled off (Auto pilot? at a different altitude than approved.

This may mean that the pressurization never functioned at all, and they slowly drowsed off in the climb. That was a relatively old plane, and did not have the bells and whistles that are standard, or at least optional today.


Fun dumb statement "It is unknown whether the plane had black boxes, the investigators at the crash site are searching to see if there is one there"

If there is any searching being done, it is in the official records, to see if a retrofit was approved.
 
On NBC the correspondent said that they weren't required to have black boxes but the NTSB was hopeful that other onboard avionics would help the investigation. Looking at the photos that doesn't look likely but with no fire I guess it's plausible.
 
Disclaimer...new GA student pilot that knows jack about pressurized cabin systems...
I find the entire scenario puzzling. No indication from the military pilot escorts that there was visible evidence that would have caused rapid decompression (structural damage, etc) from what I've gathered. And if it were somehow extremely rapid, how is it the pilot and pax could be unaware- wouldn't there be a horrendous hissing of the pressurized air leaving the cabin, not to mention anything loose/ light getting sucked towards the breach?

How do these systems work? The extent of my knowledge is bleed air from the engines is used. Is there typically some leakage, whereby a sensor introduces more bleed air to maintain pressure? I just can't fathom that multimillion $$ aircraft such as this do not have sensors and audible/visual alarms for this situation. Seems completely avoidable with the necessary technology in place.

I must be missing the obvious, so can someone please 'splain it to me?
 
There is always “leakage”. Engine bleed air flows into the cabin at a constant rate. The level of pressurization is maintained by outflow valves that control how much air escapes.
 
Single pilot was aged 69, according to news report of his name, checked against public records.
 
and what's the typical runtime of pax o2 ?

Only required to have ten minutes. The thought process is that the pilot will get you down to breathable air before you run out. Obviously, that theory doesn’t always work.
 
On NBC the correspondent said that they weren't required to have black boxes…
If the airplane was, in fact, built in 1990, as a two-pilot airplane with more than 5 passenger seats it would have had a CVR in it. Being operated single pilot, it could have been removed and/or disabled, but over on Beechtalk they’re saying that the present owner has only had it for a month. Back when I had my single pilot LOA, there was both an airplane authorization and a pilot authorization. The airplane authorization didn’t transfer with ownership change, and I’m struggling to see the FAA moving that fast.
 
and what's the typical runtime of pax o2 ?

Most aircraft pressurization systems I’m familiar with are controlled leaks (differential pressurization), so the higher you go, the higher the cabin altitude. The dixie cups deliver a metered amount of O2, don’t create a seal and don’t deliver positive pressure breathing like we had on .mil masks. Essentially, the dixie cup system is designed to keep you alive )not necessarily conscious) until the aircraft can get down to 10K cabin altitude.

Our .mil masks were sealed to the face, automatically delivered positive pressure above a certain cabin altitude that I can’t remember, AND could he gangloaded deliver up to 100% O2 instead of some metered amount.

That’s about my extent of knowledge on the dixie cup system. Our EP for ANY cabin depress event was to set verify O2 On, Flow to EMER, and O2 to Max (100%) before sealing the mask so that if you lost TUC, the positive flow 100% O2 would give you a chance to recover.

be06a437153abd24ce0c91bc2291ed05.jpg



*Normal procedure on the E-3 was Flow Normal, O2 Normal, Supply On.
 
Oh that’s right, I think the yellow cups are only good to like FL250. No seal. Pax would be no help.
 
Pax would be no help.

Not to sound sexist or anything judgmental, but the passengers included a two year old child, the child's nanny and a mother and her two-year old daughter. The mother (Barbara Rundel) was said to own the company that owned the plane. They didn't say whether she had any piloting experience or not, but if sudden depressurization was the issue even that's probably irrelevant.
 
Ward always has a way of explaining things so I can easily understand them.

 
Easy fella. Flying Iron is monitoring for geographical inaccuracies. You might get an “ooga booga” call from him if he sees this post. I know, I know. He’s REALLY important to us all.
Hey pal. Don't bring me into your lovers quarrel. I ain't interested.
 
The SFRA is stated to go to FL180. I'm not sure what one has to do to fly above that level, or if filed flight plans often (or ever) fly over the SFRA. I haven't paid much attention to that aspect since I'll never be in that situation and only needed to know the procedures to get into/out of the SFRA :p

Keep in mind, 18,000 feet is less than 3nm. An unresponsive airplane traveling at high speeds towards DC is going to result in an intercept even if they aren't technically in the SFRA, because it'd take under a minute from level at cruise to smoking hole if terrorists had gotten control of it.

Since the ATC was obviously having communications problem with an unresponsive crew at least from the time a normal descent into Islip should have started, why was the response with jet fighters so late?

Had to go NORAD on way to KISP. There’s a lot of talking from where they departed to destination. Wonder when ATC knew there was a problem?? Latest Had to be around the time they didn’t start descending. That’s not a couple of min of flight. Interesting the start to intercept wasn’t alot sooner.

I assume you meant NORDO (no radio), not NORAD (North American Aerospace Defense Command). ;p But yes, it looks like they were at FL340 for almost the whole flight, so presumably when ATC did not get a response when initiating the descent would be the latest that ATC had an indication of an issue.

However, they don't just intercept any old NORDO aircraft right away. If you monitor Guard, you'll hear a few planes get "lost" every day if ATC either forgets to hand them off before they fly out of transmitter range or maybe the pilots were in a very interesting or heated discussion and didn't hear the call(s). I know of at least one instance where pilots were not monitoring guard and ATC Googled a phone number, called it, got a hold of the right people to contact the plane on a satellite phone. So, they definitely try plenty of other things before they scramble F-16s.

Now, when they turned around and still weren't communicating, I'm sure that made things more interesting... And when they continued toward DC, I'm sure many more red flags and lights went up in various places. But it was just about exactly 30 minutes from the turn to overflying DC. It probably took 5 minutes before anyone really thought about that possibility, a few more to call ATCSCC and/or the DEN, more yet to get word to the right people to send fighters up, more yet to get the pilots in the planes and taxi out and take off and get to an intercept... Sounds pretty much like I'd expect it to go, really.

Have flown several citations in the past. Some types have “EDM” (emergency descent mode). If the AP is engaged above FL310, and there is a rapid decompression, the airplane will automatically turn and descend without crew assistance.
Not saying that’s what happened here.

In fact, it looked like that did not happen. EDM initiates an immediate 90 degree turn in all the aircraft (including Citations) I'm aware of it on. The assumption behind that design is that you might be flying on an airway and initiating a descent without a turn risks a mid-air. There isn't any such turn, nor is there any descent until right at the very end.

I can picture one engine flaming out and with service ceiling on one engine being mid twenties it starts a descent that the autopilot tries to keep up with. Soon it begins the turn, then when second engine fails the autopilot definitely can’t keep up. Then AP disconnects.

Really? Even the older low-end AP in my cheap little RV-12 won't try to hold altitude into a stall. It's got a minimum airspeed (and a max) that will limit climb/descend/alt hold.

What do you have in your RV??? Most older autopilots, especially lower end ones, will hold altitude into a stall. Most of the ones that have envelope protection in the certified GA world say "Garmin" on them. If you have a cheap autopilot that won't hold altitude into a stall, be glad you're in the non-FAA-certified world.

Just curious. There were 53 minutes from the NYC turn to impact with the ground. Is that not in the reserves? Hard to believe they would stay at 34,000 feet and not land when less than an hour of fuel remained.

Ok. So after the NYC turn they flew 8 minutes then we’re in their reserves? It was about 53 minutes from that turn to no more signal. For signal to disappear at 29,000 feet going about 440 knots, seems like in flight break up had to happen. The real question is if they had help “breaking up” from an F16 since they had already passed over DC and were headed towards VA where the Pentagon and CIA Langley are located. My confidence in our government is low enough to be suspicious at this point. Jus saying.

Jets generally don't take much more fuel than they require for a flight, because the lower they are, the more they burn, and any extra weight will slow their climb and cause even more fuel burn.

Given that this flight was filed for FL390 and never got there, they'd have burned more fuel than planned for the entire flight, so likely they had an hour plus reserve at FL390. When I looked at how long it took to get from the destination to the crash site, I pretty much thought "Yep, they ran out of gas there."

As a LSU person it's interesting to note that this ghost plane stuff started in 1980 with the Conquest with LSU's football coach on it - way back time but I don't really recall any accidents of this type prior to that.

Some pretty spectacular ones since then Payne Stewart, TBM owner association head, etc. Sure seems these are getting more common, although likely a function of increased flight level GA activity likely low hanging fruit in terms of safety improvement.

Maybe it's getting more common... Or maybe the Internet is helping us be more aware of it when it does happen.

The flight path looks correct for a flight filed to ISP that never got the runway and approach loaded in. The last filed fix, then direct to ISP. Flight plan runs out and goes into heading mode. What doesn’t make sense is there was no speed loss before the rapid descent started. If it were fuel starvation it would have slowed to a stall. Aircraft break-up (with assist?).

Yeah, the lack of a slow-down is weird. However, looking at it on ADS-B Exchange, it looks like what might happen if the autopilot disconnected when the first engine failed - It goes suddenly into a right turn that then tightens up. The vertical speed peaks at -30,016 fpm but then goes back up, like the start of a phugoid oscillation.

https://globe.adsbexchange.com/?icao=a7f457&lat=37.931&lon=-79.102&zoom=12.0&showTrace=2023-06-04

So, maybe whatever autopilot a relatively ancient Citation V had would completely disconnect when the yaw damper got overwhelmed. It certainly does not bear the signature of a shoot-down, which would be more of a ballistic path. This one had the wings attached most, if not all, of the way in.

Disclaimer...new GA student pilot that knows jack about pressurized cabin systems...
I find the entire scenario puzzling. No indication from the military pilot escorts that there was visible evidence that would have caused rapid decompression (structural damage, etc) from what I've gathered. And if it were somehow extremely rapid, how is it the pilot and pax could be unaware- wouldn't there be a horrendous hissing of the pressurized air leaving the cabin, not to mention anything loose/ light getting sucked towards the breach?

How do these systems work? The extent of my knowledge is bleed air from the engines is used. Is there typically some leakage, whereby a sensor introduces more bleed air to maintain pressure? I just can't fathom that multimillion $$ aircraft such as this do not have sensors and audible/visual alarms for this situation. Seems completely avoidable with the necessary technology in place.

I must be missing the obvious, so can someone please 'splain it to me?

The necessary technology is in place on newer aircraft of this type, but this was an old one. 1990.

Generally, pressurization systems control the pressure by opening and closing an outflow valve. Leakier airplane means the outflow will be generally more closed.

These systems do fail. Outflow valve gets stuck open during the climb, and you may have a system that is "working" but you don't notice at first, because you're expecting the pressure in the cabin to go down as you climb anyway, and the cabin may still be partially pressurized. Depending on the system, the warnings may not start until the cabin altitude is above a certain level, like 12-14,000 feet. With a single pilot, especially an older one, he may not have really recognized what was going on until it was too late for him.
 
What do you have in your RV??? Most older autopilots, especially lower end ones, will hold altitude into a stall. Most of the ones that have envelope protection in the certified GA world say "Garmin" on them. If you have a cheap autopilot that won't hold altitude into a stall, be glad you're in the non-FAA-certified world.
It’s a Dynon D180, released in 2006 and at least two generations old. it won’t let the airplane go above the set max speed or below the set min speed, or exceed the set max bank angle. It will shallow the climb or descent to stay within the envelope. I haven’t tried setting altitude hold and reducing the throttle to see if it will give up and disconnect at some point, or just abandon the altitude. I suspect it’s in the manual, but I don’t have the docs on hand to look it up at the moment.

All that said, if the plane was that old I guess it’s not too surprising it would have an age appropriate AP that would be as dumb as a bag of hammers. Software has come a long, long way

And yes, it’s difficult to imagine a scenario where I’d go back to a type certificated airplane.
 
It’s a Dynon D180, released in 2006 and at least two generations old. it won’t let the airplane go above the set max speed or below the set min speed, or exceed the set max bank angle. It will shallow the climb or descent to stay within the envelope. I haven’t tried setting altitude hold and reducing the throttle to see if it will give up and disconnect at some point, or just abandon the altitude. I suspect it’s in the manual, but I don’t have the docs on hand to look it up at the moment.

All that said, if the plane was that old I guess it’s not too surprising it would have an age appropriate AP that would be as dumb as a bag of hammers. Software has come a long, long way

And yes, it’s difficult to imagine a scenario where I’d go back to a type certificated airplane.

Yep, that explains it. Dynon has only recently started playing in the certified market, so their stuff is going to be way ahead of anything certified of the same vintage. And this particular aircraft is twice as old as the D180.
 
I operated out of the FRZ for some years. Got to witness the Keystone Cops intercept of the Kentukcy governor's plane in 2004, from the ground. Seems the gov's xpnder had failed and ATC had cleared him into DCA, no problem. Except the DOD folks were also looking at him, were NOT co-located with the FAA controller, and the comms between the FAA and DOD were clumsy, This was serveral years after 9/11.

I also got to act as a target for the 113th TFW F-16s, to practice their intercepts. Night, off the coast of NJ, about 60-70 miles out. The could go supersonic out there, as I recall. One intercept was pulling up in front of my 182 and lighting burner - I could actually hear it ignite AND smell it. Flares deployed on another. I was impressed by how slow a F-16 could fly. One one we held altitude and transitioned to slow flight, and the lead interceptor hung in much longer than I thought possible.
 
Hopefully the NTSB doesn't prompt the FAA to eliminate SP ops unless the aircraft has equipment to take prevent such things. A lot of new small jets have systems that will drop you to 10 or 12k stat if there's a pressurization issue or pilot non-response.
 
Yeah, the lack of a slow-down is weird. However, looking at it on ADS-B Exchange, it looks like what might happen if the autopilot disconnected when the first engine failed - It goes suddenly into a right turn that then tightens up. The vertical speed peaks at -30,016 fpm but then goes back up, like the start of a phugoid oscillation.

https://globe.adsbexchange.com/?icao=a7f457&lat=37.931&lon=-79.102&zoom=12.0&showTrace=2023-06-04

So, maybe whatever autopilot a relatively ancient Citation V had would completely disconnect when the yaw damper got overwhelmed. It certainly does not bear the signature of a shoot-down, which would be more of a ballistic path. This one had the wings attached most, if not all, of the way in.

I was thinking about that as well. A wild shot in the dark, but I wonder if something tripped the autopilot when the engines shut down and lost the generators. I realize the aircraft has batteries that should have kept the systems live, but perhaps it didn't for some reason?
 
Hopefully the NTSB doesn't prompt the FAA to eliminate SP ops unless the aircraft has equipment to take prevent such things. A lot of new small jets have systems that will drop you to 10 or 12k stat if there's a pressurization issue or pilot non-response.

Before the chicken little syndrom kicks in full gear, how about letting the investigation take place and maybe shed some light on what really happened.

Every pressurized aircraft I've flown has a cabin warning system to alert when the cabin exceeds a preset altitude. I assume an older Citation has this same type setup, so the chance of a pilot just overlooking an aircraft not pressurizing on schedule would be highly unlikely.

A rapid depressurization at altitude would be a more likely scenario. Again, on an older Citation which type mask does it have in the cockpit? Quick donning or the old style hanging behind the pilots?

I see a few post here that are aluding to pilot age. Again, pure speculation as we know zero so far.
 
I operated out of the FRZ for some years. Got to witness the Keystone Cops intercept of the Kentukcy governor's plane in 2004, from the ground. Seems the gov's xpnder had failed and ATC had cleared him into DCA, no problem. Except the DOD folks were also looking at him, were NOT co-located with the FAA controller, and the comms between the FAA and DOD were clumsy, This was serveral years after 9/11.

I also got to act as a target for the 113th TFW F-16s, to practice their intercepts. Night, off the coast of NJ, about 60-70 miles out. The could go supersonic out there, as I recall. One intercept was pulling up in front of my 182 and lighting burner - I could actually hear it ignite AND smell it. Flares deployed on another. I was impressed by how slow a F-16 could fly. One one we held altitude and transitioned to slow flight, and the lead interceptor hung in much longer than I thought possible.

If you were intercepted why would you slow down and try and shake the intercept?
 
That will happen and they now believe you are up to no good. There are defined procedures for what to do if intercepted. Slowing down to shake the intercept is not one of them.
 
Before the chicken little syndrom kicks in full gear, how about letting the investigation take place and maybe shed some light on what really happened.

Absolutely not. I quite enjoy panicking about the possibility of a rapidly descending sky and its associated dangers. Or... in this case, speculating about failed aircraft systems or the health conditions of a pilot I've never met.
 
If you were intercepted why would you slow down and try and shake the intercept?

You do realize he stated that, "I also got to act as a target for the 113th TFW F-16s, to practice their intercepts." It was a practice, not an actual intercept.
 
A wild shot in the dark, but I wonder if something tripped the autopilot when the engines shut down and lost the generators. I realize the aircraft has batteries that should have kept the systems live, but perhaps it didn't for some reason?
What about any of the electronics that feed into the AP and are required to keep the AP functional. Perhaps one of those is more voltage sensitive then the rest of the system and did a reset which then triggered the AP to disconnect?

My 430 appears very sensitive to low voltage and will do a reset on a voltage dip while all the other electronics keep running.
 
That will happen and they now believe you are up to no good. There are defined procedures for what to do if intercepted. Slowing down to shake the intercept is not one of them.
What if you're up to no good? I mean, I'd assume if you're being intercepted that you're up to no good. And I'd assume they'd assume that too. Why would they assume otherwise? If they didn't assume you were up to no good, why would they be intercepting you?
 
Before the chicken little syndrom kicks in full gear, how about letting the investigation take place and maybe shed some light on what really happened.

I didn't realize you were new here. :p

Every pressurized aircraft I've flown has a cabin warning system to alert when the cabin exceeds a preset altitude. I assume an older Citation has this same type setup, so the chance of a pilot just overlooking an aircraft not pressurizing on schedule would be highly unlikely.

A rapid depressurization at altitude would be a more likely scenario.

I disagree. Rapid depressurizations are obvious, even if all your warning systems fail, and we're trained to go straight for the mask.

A slow depressurization can easily be missed until the warnings go off, but if the warning doesn't happen until 14-15K cabin altitude, and it takes a while for the cabin to get there, the pilot may be hypoxic before the warning goes off, and already unable to effectively deal with it.

I see a few post here that are aluding to pilot age. Again, pure speculation as we know zero so far.

Latest is that the fighter pilots saw the PIC slumped over. Could be medical, more likely hypoxia that may have been exacerbated by age and even potentially smoking. Lots we don't know, but I'm not sure how much the investigation will find given the condition of the airplane and its occupants.
 
I disagree. Rapid depressurizations are obvious, even if all your warning systems fail, and we're trained to go straight for the mask.

With rapid (expolsive) depressurization the pilots are typically stunned at first, delaying realization and mask donning. The "go straight for the mask" is good and practiced in the sim, but the sim can't replicate the depressurization other than making a lot of noise. And in sim training the applicants know it's coming ( "OK, let's climb to FL400 now" :rolleyes: ).

Also in a rapid depressurization there could be a fog as well as all the dust and debris flying around the cabin, adding to complicate things.

A slow depressurization can easily be missed until the warnings go off, but if the warning doesn't happen until 14-15K cabin altitude, and it takes a while for the cabin to get there, the pilot may be hypoxic before the warning goes off, and already unable to effectively deal with it.

This would be rare.
 
You do realize he stated that, "I also got to act as a target for the 113th TFW F-16s, to practice their intercepts." It was a practice, not an actual intercept.

I considered that statement but the military does not use civilians as targets unless they are contractors. I have never noted a contract for a Cessna 182.
 
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