Akron-Canton Regional Airport
Aircraft Accident/Incident Report

Akron, Ohio 44720
Friday, March 18, 2011 EDT

NTSB Narrative Summary Released at Completion of Accident

On March 18, 2011, about 0009 eastern daylight time, an Embraer EMB-145XR, N11187, veered off of the left side of runway 23 while landing at the Akron-Canton Regional Airport, Akron, Ohio. The 3 crewmembers and 43 passengers on board reported no injuries. The airplane sustained minor damage. The airplane was operated by ExpressJet Airlines as United Express flight 5916 as a 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 121 scheduled domestic passenger flight. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed for the flight which operated on an instrument flight rules flight plan. The flight originated from the Chicago O'Hare International Airport (ORD), Chicago, Illinois, at 2222. The flight crew reported to a Federal Aviation Administration inspector that the flight was uneventful until the nose landing gear touched down on the runway during landing. At that point, the airplane made an uncommanded left turn that the pilots were unable to correct. The airplane veered off the runway pavement before coming to a stop. The passengers were deplaned through the main boarding door of the airplane. During a telephone interview of the flight crew, the captain reported that they made a visual approach that was backed up using the instrument landing system and that the glideslope was captured at the outer marker of the published approach. He reported that the approach was normal and that there were no warnings or messages from the airplane's systems prior to touchdown. During the landing, once the nose landing gear touched down, the airplane veered to the left and he estimated that it was about 3 seconds from the time the nosewheel touched down to the time that the airplane exited the runway onto the grass. He said that during the event, the first officer attempted to manually disengage nosewheel steering using the switch provided on his control wheel, but this action did not prevent the airplane from veering to the side. The captain stated that the approach plate book used during the approach slid off of the side of the bracket and onto his lap during the event. He said that he took the book and tossed it out of the way and that it came to rest on the flight bag behind and to the left of his seat. He said that at some point it may have been in the area of the nosewheel tiller control but was not on the tiller, and that it was clear of the tiller before the airplane exited the runway. The first officer reported that after touchdown, the captain lowered the nosewheel slowly and the airplane started to go to the left immediately. He immediately got on the controls with the captain and applied hard right rudder, right brake, and activated the nosewheel steering disconnect. He stated that when engaging the nosewheel steering disconnect, a chime is usually heard, but he did not remember hearing it during the event. He stated that he did not feel the nosewheel steering disengage, as expected, when the switch was activated. The nosewheel steering system of the airplane was an electro-hydraulic system that used inputs from either the rudder pedals, or the captain's tiller. The nose wheel steering can be commanded to a maximum angle of 71 degrees when using the tiller, 5 degrees when using the rudder pedals, or 76 degrees using both tiller and rudder pedals. A proximity sensor connected to the feedback unit sensor disengages the system if the nose wheel is rotated beyond 7 +/- 1 degrees when the tiller is not engaged. If the nosewheel steering system disengages in this manner, the system can be reengaged by engaging the tiller when speed is below 25 kts. The steering system may also be manually disengaged through switches located on either control wheel, provided the tiller is not engaged. If the nosewheel steering system is disengaged for any reason while the aircraft is on the ground a caution oral alert will sound, the master caution light will illuminate, and the message "STEER INOP" will display on the EICAS. The system allows for the nose wheel to free caster any time the nose landing gear is on the ground and the nosewheel steering system is disengaged. Manual disengagement of the nosewheel steering system using the flight crew switches would place the nosewheel into this free castering mode. An on-scene examination revealed skid marks on the runway leading to the resting position of the airplane. There was a distinct witness mark that was made by the right nose wheel tire chine on the runway that was consistent with a deflection of the nosewheel steering to the left. Examination of the airplane was conducted which included on-airplane testing of the nosewheel steering system in accordance with the airplane manufacturer's maintenance manual. No faults were found during the ground testing. Several components of the nosewheel steering and braking system were removed from the airplane for testing at the respective manufacturer facilities. Although testing of the individual components did reveal some parameters that were not within manufacturer specifications, the anomalies would not have resulted in the behavior described by the flight crew. No anomalies were found that would have precluded normal operation. Recorded data from the airplane's flight data recorder showed that at 0008, the aircraft descended through 1,700 ft pressure altitude, while on a magnetic heading of approximately 233 degrees. The Air/Ground Switch moved to 'Grnd' at 0008:45, and was followed by symmetric spoiler and thrust reverser deployment. The data showed activity on the pilot brake pedals began at this time. Four seconds later, at 0008:49, the copilot's right brake pedal began to show activity. At 0008:52, the recorded magnetic heading began to swing to the left as the indicated airspeed fell below 100 kts. At 0008:53, the rudder reached its maximum right deflection of 12.7 degrees. At 0008:55, the left and right ailerons reached their maximum deflection of 16.5 degrees TED (trailing edge down) and 24.4 degrees TEU (trailing edge up) respectively. The aircraft came to rest at approximately 0009:04 on a magnetic heading of 199 degrees. Tiller engagement and nosewheel deflection were not recorded parameters.

NTSB Probable Cause Narrative

Not Yet Reported

Event Information

Type of Event Incident
Event Date 3/18/2011
Event Day of the Week Friday
Time of Event 9
Event Time Zone Eastern Daylight Time
Event City Akron
Event State OHIO
Event Country --
Zipcode of the event site 44720
Event Date Year 2011
Event Date Month 3
MidAir Collision Indicator No
On Ground Collision occurred ? No
Event Location Latitude 405454N
Event Location Longitude 0812637W
Event Location Airport Akron-Canton Regional Airport
Event Location Nearest Airport ID CAK
Indicates whether the acc/inc occurred off or on an airport On Airport
Distance from airport in statute miles 0
Degrees magnetic from airport 0
Airport Elevation 1226
Weather Briefing Completeness --
Investigator's weather source Weather Observation Facility
Time of the weather observation 2351 Eastern Daylight Time
Direction of event from weather observation facility (degrees) 0
Weather Observation Facility ID CAK
Elevation of weather observation facility 1226
Distance of event from weather observation facility (units?) 0
Time Zone of the weather observation EDT
Lighting Conditions Night
Lowest Ceiling Height 6000
Lowest Non-Ceiling Height --
Sky/Lowest/Cloud Conditions --
Sky Condition for Lowest Ceiling Broken
Visibility Runway Visual Range (Feet) --
Visibility Runway Visual Value (Statute Miles) --
Visibility (Statute Miles) 10
Air Temperature at event time (in degrees celsius) 14
Dew Point at event time (in degress fahrenheit) 6
Wind Direction (degrees magnetic) 210
Variable Wind Indicator Wind direction could be determined
Wind Speed (knots) 14
Wind Velocity Indicator --
Wind Gust Indicator --
Wind Gust (knots) --
Altimeter Setting at event time (in. Hg) 29.93
Density Altitude (feet) --
Intensity of Precipitation --
METAR weather report --
Event Highest Injury None
On Ground, Fatal Injuries --
On Ground, Minor Injuries --
On Ground, Serious Injuries --
Injury Total Fatal --
Injury Total Minor --
Injury Total None 46
Injury Total Serious --
Injury Total All --
Investigating Agency NTSB
NTSB Docket Number (internal use) --
NTSB Notification Source FAA-AGL-ROC
NTSB Notification Date --
NTSB Notification Time --
Fiche Number and/or location -used to find docket information --
Date of most recent change to record Aug 28 2014 4:15PM
User who most recently changed record brajo
Basic weather conditions Visual Meteorological Cond
FAA District Office --

Aircraft Involved

Aircraft #1

Aircraft Registration Number N11187
NTSB Number CEN11IA234
Missing Aircraft Indicator --
Federal Aviation Reg. Part Part 121: Air Carrier
Type of Flight Plan filed IFR
Flight plan Was Activated? Yes
Damage Minor
Aircraft Fire None
Aircraft Explosion None
Aircraft Manufacturer's Full Name EMBRAER
Aircraft Model EMB-145XR
Aircraft Series Identifier --
Aircraft Serial Number 14500927
Certified Max Gross Weight --
Aircraft Category Airplane
Aircraft Registration Class --
Aircraft is a homebuilt? No
Flight Crew Seats --
Cabin Crew Seats --
Passenger Seats --
Total number of seats on the aircraft 55
Number of Engines 2
Fixed gear or retractable gear Retractable
Aircraft, Type of Last Inspection Continuous Airworthiness
Date of Last Inspection May 25 2011 12:00AM
Airframe hours since last inspection --
Airframe Hours 11686
ELT Installed Yes
ELT Activated No
ELT Aided Location of Event Site Unknown
ELT Type C126
Aircraft Owner Name WELLS FARGO BANK NORTHWEST NA TRUSTEE
Aircraft Owner Street Address 299 S MAIN ST 12TH FL
Aircraft Owner City SALT LAKE CITY
Aircraft Owner State UT
Aircraft Owner Country USA
Aircraft Owner Zipcode 84111
Operator is an individual? No
Operator Name Express Jet
Operator Same as Owner? No
Operator Is Doing Business As --
Operator Address Same as Owner? No
Operator Street Address 990 Toffie Terrace
Operator City Atlanta
Operator State GA
Operator Country USA
Operator Zip code 30354
Operator Code C2XA
Owner has at least one certificate Yes - certificate holder
Other Operator of large aircraft? --
Certified for Part 133 or 137 Operation --
Operator Certificate Number --
Indicates whether an air carrier operation was scheduled or not Scheduled
Indicates Domestic or International Flight Domestic
Operator carrying Pax/Cargo/Mail Passenger Only
Type of Flying (Per_Bus / Primary) --
Second Pilot on Board Yes
Departure Point Same as Event No
Departure Airport Code ORD
Departure City Chicago
Departure State IL
Departure Country USA
Departure Time 2222
Departure Time Zone CDT
Destination Same as Local Flt crash at destination city
Destination Airport Code CAK
Destination City Akron
Destination State OH
Destination Country USA
Specific Phase of Flight --
Report sent to ICAO? --
Evacuation occurred --
Date of most recent change to record Aug 28 2014 4:10PM
User who most recently changed record brajo
Since inspection or accident Time of Accident
Event Location Runway Number and Location 23
Runway Length 8205
Runway Width 150
Sight Seeing flight No
Air Medical Flight No
Medical Flight --