N/A Airport
Aircraft Accident/Incident Report

Newfield, Arizona 85634
Friday, November 23, 2012 14:10 MST

NTSB Narrative Summary Released at Completion of Accident

About 2 hours into his mission, the pilot decided to take a lunch break. After landing the helicopter in a suitable area, although with potholes and cattle hoof prints in the dried mud, the pilot performed a stability check with the cyclic and then lowered the collective to the full-down position. With the engine at 100-percent power, the pilot added cyclic and collective friction to prevent the controls from inadvertently moving while he reached to retrieve his lunch from a bag located just aft and right of his seat; he did not engage the collective lock. The pilot let go of the cyclic with his left hand and, while guarding it with his legs, used both hands to seal the lunch bag and replace it behind the seat, which resulted in the pilot experiencing a momentary loss of situational awareness due to distraction. At that moment, the pilot felt the nose of the helicopter begin to get light on the skids with a slight upward pitch change. The pilot then placed both hands back on the controls and added forward cyclic to correct for the increase in pitch and to ensure positive skid contact with the ground; the cyclic and collective friction remained applied. The helicopter then began to exhibit vertical dynamic oscillations, which continued to resonate and worsen, consistent with the onset of ground resonance. It is likely that at least one, if not both, ground resonance straps were in a pothole depression and not in contact with the ground. When the condition worsened, the pilot made a positive collective application to lift the helicopter off the ground in an attempt to regain stability. As the helicopter began to ascend, it lurched forward and downward in an unusually nose-low attitude, which resulted in the lower wire strike blade contacting the ground and establishing a pivot point. The pilot then made an aggressive aft cyclic movement with a positive collective input to arrest the nose-down attitude. The tail skid subsequently impacted the ground, pushed the vertical fin and tail rotor gearbox upward, and severed the tail rotor drive shaft forward of the tail rotor gearbox. The tail of the helicopter then bounced upward from the impact followed by an uncommanded left yaw around its nose. The helicopter continued to spin left until the pilot reduced the collective to arrest the spin. The helicopter then touched down in a nose-up attitude and settled upright on its skids. A postaccident examination of the helicopter revealed that the pilot's inability to regain control was due to the loss of the tail rotor drive, which occurred as a result of the pilot's aggressive overapplication of the flight controls. The pilot's actions resulted in the tail skid impacting terrain, which damaged the tail rotor gear box and severed the tail rotor drive shaft.

NTSB Probable Cause Narrative

The pilot's distraction while retrieving an item behind him while the helicopter was on the ground with the engine running, which led to his aggressive overapplication of the flight controls after experiencing a ground resonance condition and subsequent loss of helicopter control.

Event Information

Type of Event Accident
Event Date 11/23/2012
Event Day of the Week Friday
Time of Event 1410
Event Time Zone Mountain Standard Time
Event City Newfield
Event State ARIZONA
Event Country --
Zipcode of the event site 85634
Event Date Year 2012
Event Date Month 11
MidAir Collision Indicator No
On Ground Collision occurred ? No
Event Location Latitude 313235N
Event Location Longitude 1114133W
Event Location Airport N/A
Event Location Nearest Airport ID --
Indicates whether the acc/inc occurred off or on an airport Off Airport/Airstrip
Distance from airport in statute miles --
Degrees magnetic from airport --
Airport Elevation --
Weather Briefing Completeness --
Investigator's weather source Weather Observation Facility
Time of the weather observation 1358 Mountain Standard Time
Direction of event from weather observation facility (degrees) 100
Weather Observation Facility ID OLS
Elevation of weather observation facility 3955
Distance of event from weather observation facility (units?) 44
Time Zone of the weather observation MST
Lighting Conditions Day
Lowest Ceiling Height --
Lowest Non-Ceiling Height --
Sky/Lowest/Cloud Conditions Clear
Sky Condition for Lowest Ceiling None
Visibility Runway Visual Range (Feet) --
Visibility Runway Visual Value (Statute Miles) --
Visibility (Statute Miles) 10
Air Temperature at event time (in degrees celsius) 27
Dew Point at event time (in degress fahrenheit) -2
Wind Direction (degrees magnetic) 80
Variable Wind Indicator Wind direction could be determined
Wind Speed (knots) 12
Wind Velocity Indicator --
Wind Gust Indicator Not Gusting
Wind Gust (knots) --
Altimeter Setting at event time (in. Hg) 30.18
Density Altitude (feet) --
Intensity of Precipitation --
METAR weather report --
Event Highest Injury Minor
On Ground, Fatal Injuries --
On Ground, Minor Injuries --
On Ground, Serious Injuries --
Injury Total Fatal --
Injury Total Minor 1
Injury Total None --
Injury Total Serious --
Injury Total All 1
Investigating Agency NTSB
NTSB Docket Number (internal use) 32628
NTSB Notification Source NTSB Communication Center
NTSB Notification Date --
NTSB Notification Time --
Fiche Number and/or location -used to find docket information --
Date of most recent change to record Apr 3 2014 7:03PM
User who most recently changed record stam
Basic weather conditions Visual Meteorological Cond
FAA District Office --

Aircraft Involved

Aircraft #1

Aircraft Registration Number N3984A
NTSB Number WPR13TA051
Missing Aircraft Indicator --
Federal Aviation Reg. Part Public Use
Type of Flight Plan filed None
Flight plan Was Activated? No
Damage Substantial
Aircraft Fire None
Aircraft Explosion None
Aircraft Manufacturer's Full Name EUROCOPTER
Aircraft Model AS350B3 2B1
Aircraft Series Identifier --
Aircraft Serial Number 7105
Certified Max Gross Weight 5225
Aircraft Category Helicopter
Aircraft Registration Class --
Aircraft is a homebuilt? No
Flight Crew Seats --
Cabin Crew Seats --
Passenger Seats --
Total number of seats on the aircraft 6
Number of Engines 1
Fixed gear or retractable gear Fixed
Aircraft, Type of Last Inspection Continuous Airworthiness
Date of Last Inspection Nov 16 2012 12:00AM
Airframe hours since last inspection 56
Airframe Hours 1056
ELT Installed Yes
ELT Activated No
ELT Aided Location of Event Site Unknown
ELT Type C126
Aircraft Owner Name Department of Homeland Security
Aircraft Owner Street Address --
Aircraft Owner City Washington
Aircraft Owner State DC
Aircraft Owner Country USA
Aircraft Owner Zipcode 20001
Operator is an individual? No
Operator Name Department of Homeland Security
Operator Same as Owner? Yes
Operator Is Doing Business As --
Operator Address Same as Owner? No
Operator Street Address --
Operator City Washington
Operator State DC
Operator Country USA
Operator Zip code 20001
Operator Code --
Owner has at least one certificate None
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 --
Indicates Domestic or International Flight --
Operator carrying Pax/Cargo/Mail --
Type of Flying (Per_Bus / Primary) --
Second Pilot on Board No
Departure Point Same as Event No
Departure Airport Code DMA
Departure City Tucson
Departure State AZ
Departure Country USA
Departure Time 1208
Departure Time Zone MST
Destination Same as Local Flt --
Destination Airport Code DMA
Destination City Tucson
Destination State AZ
Destination Country USA
Specific Phase of Flight --
Report sent to ICAO? --
Evacuation occurred --
Date of most recent change to record Apr 3 2014 7:02PM
User who most recently changed record stam
Since inspection or accident Time of Accident
Event Location Runway Number and Location N/A
Runway Length --
Runway Width --
Sight Seeing flight No
Air Medical Flight No
Medical Flight --