Wing may have hit tree in deadly air tanker crash
Coeur d'Alene Press | UPDATED 11 years, 2 months AGO
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - The wing of a firefighting aircraft might have hit a tree and broken off before the tanker crashed into a canyon wall in Yosemite National Park, killing the pilot, federal investigators said Wednesday.
The twin-engine S-2T air tanker was destroyed when it hit the ground and caught fire, the National Transportation Safety Board said in a preliminary report on the Oct. 7 crash.
A more complete investigation is ongoing and expected to take months.
Veteran pilot Geoffrey "Craig" Hunt, the plane's sole crew member, was following another aircraft as he prepared to drop 1,200 gallons of chemical retardant on the fire that was climbing a steep canyon wall near the park's west entrance.
A third plane flew overhead, directing the firefighting efforts.
"The crew of the controller airplane reported that the accident airplane may have struck a tree with its wing, which separated from the airplane," according the five-paragraph report. "Both aircrews reported that there was smoke in the area, but visibility was good."
Authorities previously said the aircraft's left wing was found at the beginning of a roughly quarter-mile-long debris field.
Ken Pimlott, director of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, said the agency hopes the final report will provide findings that can be used to minimize the inherent dangers of the job.
"We owe that to Craig, who traded his life in an effort to protect the lives of others," Pimlott said in a statement.
The investigation was complicated because of the wildfire that eventually burned more than 300 acres, cutting off electricity and closing the main road into Yosemite Valley for days.
The state's remaining 22 air tankers were grounded for two days until investigators were satisfied that the crash was not a result of faulty equipment which could affect the rest of the fleet.
The air tankers form the backbone of the state's firefighting fleet, which also includes 11 helicopters and 14 observer planes used to guide the other firefighting aircraft.