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  Crash probe focusing on weather, crew's training
Last updated: 2009-02-17


Crash probe focusing on weather, crew's training
2009-02-17

Nations
U.S.
City
Colorado Springs
States
New York
Colorado
Category
Regions
County
Erie County
El Paso County
Event
2009 Continental Air Crash
University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Source
(AP)

CLARENCE, N.Y. - The man at the controls of a turboprop plane that pitched like a kite before crashing into a house last week had spent only 110 hours flying that model, and investigators said Tuesday they would look into the quality and quantity of his training.

The pilot of Continental Connection Flight 3407 apparently ignored federal recommendations not to fly on autopilot as ice was building on his plane, though investigators so far say he violated no rules.

Whether Capt. Marvin Renslow did all he could to prevent potentially disastrous ice buildup or shake it from his plane remains to be seen. But experts pointed out Tuesday that he had flown thousands of hours in a similar plane, which would have prepared him for icing on his aircraft.

The actions and even the lives of Renslow, 47, of Tampa, Fla., and the first officer, Rebecca Lynne Shaw, 24, of Seattle, are under close scrutiny as the National Transportation Safety Board tries to piece together how a routine flight went fatally wrong in its last 26 seconds.

The NTSB will look into the type of training they received, how they performed, how many hours they flew in the seven days before the crash, how much rest they had and what they did in the 72 hours before the accident, said board member Steve Chealander. That includes a look at whether they drank any alcohol or took drugs, a routine question after any crash.

Another NTSB investigator left in Buffalo will focus on any role the wintry weather had. Other investigators stayed in Buffalo to interview pilots who had recently flown with Renslow and Shaw; many fly regularly into the area.

With no obvious answer to the crash, the NTSB was preparing for a yearlong study of everything related to the plane and its cockpit crew to find out what combination of factors can eventually be blamed for the disaster.

The Bombardier Dash 8 Q400 was about six miles from Buffalo Niagara International Airport and on autopilot Thursday night when it lost its ability to fly, pitched sharply up and down and side to side before smashing into a home and bursting into flames, killing all 49 people aboard and a man in the house.

All but 20 percent of the plane had been removed from the site by Tuesday, NTSB chief investigator Lorenda Ward said. Crews finished gathering human remains Tuesday afternoon, said Dr. Scott Zimmerman of the Erie County Health Department said.

No evidence of a malfunction of the plane has emerged, Ward said.

The Colgan Air crew took a cautious approach to the flight, engaging deicing equipment 11 minutes after the flight left Newark, N.J., and leaving it on until the plane crashed, Chealander said.

It appears Renslow disregarded the NTSB's and his airline's recommendation that autopilot not be used in icy conditions, Chealander said, adding that the decision did not violate airline rules because shutting off the autopilot is required only in severe icing conditions.

Renslow had begun flying the Dash 8 in December, accumulating 110 hours since then; Shaw had 774 hours in the plane model. Chealander stressed that pilots must train rigorously every time they switch plane types and that the relative lack of hours would not be considered significant.

Pilots are ordered to do about five weeks of training on a new aircraft, including oral examinations, simulator training and required time flying with another certified pilot, Chealander said.

"The training is very strict," he said. He said he sweated all five times he tested for a new aircraft.

"I still get nervous for it," Chealander said.

Colgan Air, based in Manassas, Va., did not return a call Tuesday seeking comment on training procedures. Renslow had 3,000 hours of flying experience with Colgan over 3 1/2 years, which is nearly the maximum a pilot can fly over that period of time under government regulations.

Shirley Phillips, associate professor of aviation sciences at Daniel Webster College in Nashua, N.H., has piloted a plane that Renslow had a lot of experience flying. It was a Saab twin-engine turboprop, a type Renslow flew for thousands of hours before he switched late last year to the Dash 8.

"They're both turboprops," she said. "As far as flying in icing conditions there really isn't anything you would do differently. The deicing mechanisms are the same."

The rules for flying in ice would also be the same, she said, adding that Renslow might have made a mistake when he opted to stay on autopilot even after noticing significant icing on the wings and windshield, as indicated by recordings.

Phillips also said it was not encouraging that an automatic safety mechanism meant to prevent a stall forced the autopilot off just before the plane hurtled earthward.

"The airplane shouldn't have gotten to those conditions where it turned the autopilot off," Phillips said.

Johnny Summers, a pilot on a Boeing 737 who has also flown turboprop planes, said flying in ice is fairly routine; planes are designed for it and pilots trained for it. However, Summers recalled that a few years ago, while flying a Twin Otter into Colorado Springs, he was forced to land about 60 miles short because of severe ice. The aircraft is a twin-engine turboprop that seats as many as eight, while the Dash 8 Renslow was flying could seat 74.

He could not remember whether the crew turned off the autopilot, but said all deicing and anti-icing equipment was immediately turned on.

"I wasn't nervous about it," Summers said. "It's not that spooky of a thing."

John Hansman, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor who specializes in flight safety, said it was fair to focus on the autopilot as an issue because "that is the only thing so far that is against recommended procedures."

The NTSB's Ward said the agency was sending investigators across the country to interview those who supervised Renslow and Shaw and anyone who had trained them.

"In most investigations, people describe the flight crew as being very good," she said.

Investigators, though, know that the challenges in a sky emergency might be beyond anyone's capabilities.

"It comes down to, we're all human," she said.

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