Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > CV-22 accident investigation board results released
 
Photos 
CV-22 accident investigation
Air Force Special Operations Command officials released the results of their investigation into the CV-22 Osprey accident that occurred April 9, 2010, near Qalat, Afghanistan. Four people were killed and 16 of the 20 people onboard were injured in the accident. The CV-22, like the one shown here, is a tilt-rotor vertical takeoff and landing aircraft. (Courtesy photo)
Download HiRes
 
Related Factsheets
 CV-22 Osprey
CV-22 accident investigation board results released

Posted 12/17/2010 Email story   Print story

    

12/17/2010 - HURLBURT FIELD, Fla. (AFNS) -- Air Force Special Operations Command officials released the results of their investigation into the CV-22 Osprey accident April 9, near Qalat, Afghanistan, that killed four people and injured 16 of the 20 onboard.

The pilot, flight engineer, an Army Ranger, and a civilian contract employee were killed in the crash.

Under the authority delegated to him by the AFSOC commander, the AFSOC vice-commander convened an Accident Investigation Board to investigate the matter, and designated Brig. Gen. Donald Harvel, the Air National Guard assistant to the commander, AFSOC, Hurlburt Field, Fla., as the board president.

Concluding the investigation, the board president could not determine the cause of the mishap by the standard of "clear and convincing evidence," in part because the flight incident recorder, the Vibration Structural Life and Engine Diagnostics control unit, and the right engine were destroyed and therefore not available for analysis. After an exhaustive investigation of the available evidence, the board president ruled out multiple possible causes. Items ruled out included loss due to enemy action, environmental brownout conditions and vortex ring state. In addition, a design problem that led to the replacement of the Central De-ice Distributor support bracket found in all Marine Corps and Air Force Ospreys, was not a factor.

The board president determined 10 factors substantially contributed to the mishap. These included inadequate weather planning, a poorly executed, low-visibility approach, a tailwind, a challenging visual environment, the mishap crew's task saturation, the mishap copilot's distraction, the mishap copilot's negative transfer of a behavior learned in a previous aircraft, the mishap crew's pressing to accomplish their first combat mission of the deployment, an unanticipated high rate of descent and engine power loss. Substantially contributing factors play an important role in the mishap sequence of events and are supported by the greater weight of credible evidence.

The convening authority approved the board president's report, with comments. While legally sufficient, he assessed the evidence in the AIB report did not support a determination of engine power loss as one of the 10 substantially contributing factors. The convening authority made this decision based upon the evidence in the AIB report and additional analysis of the evidence in the report. The convening authority concluded the preponderance of credible evidence did not indicate engine power loss as a substantially contributing factor of the mishap.

After a review of the original AIB report, the convening authority's statement of opinion and additional material obtained after the completion of the AIB report, the chief of staff of the Air Force reopened the investigation and directed the AIB board president to analyze the additional information.

The board president conducted a follow-on investigation to analyze two Naval Air Systems Command reports and the convening authority's analysis of video data. After consideration of the new material the only fact the AIB president changed from his original report was the ground speed of the aircraft at impact from what was believed to be 75 knots to 80 knots at the time of impact. The remainder of the findings was unchanged.

The primary purpose of the board was to provide a publicly releasable report of the facts and circumstances surrounding the accident. An executive summary of the report is available at http://usaf.aib.law.af.mil/index.html.

The entire report is available at http://www.afsoc.af.mil/accidentinvestigationboard/index.asp or by contacting the AFSOC Public Affairs Office at 850-884-5515.



tabComments
12/17/2010 2:16:26 PM ET
Rest in peace brave warriors. Regardless of any investigation board you have made your own way to the bright lights of the sky above.
TacAirlifter, Colorado
 
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
AF surgeon helps Belizean boy get 'new hand'

Cadets earn praise for cyclogyro project  1

Obama emphasizes concern about sexual assault in military  3

Air Force Reserve submits construction plans to Senate

Warrior Games 2013: AF earns silver, bronze archery medals

Warrior Games 2013: Air Force wins 11 medals in track and field competition

Airmen train with Polish air force

2 Airmen earn spots to compete on world stage of soccer  3

Through Airmen's Eyes: Following dream as American, Academy cadet  1

GPS IIF-4 successfully launched from Cape Canaveral

Warrior Games 2013: Airman faces challenge at Games as TBI victim   2

Games proves not 'end of the world' for wounded Airman

Hagel orders retraining of recruiters, sexual assault responders  19

Hagel announces fewer furlough days for DOD employees  15

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Only fools sit around wishing for good old days  3

We can make a difference  5


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     USA.gov     Security & Policy     No Fear Act     E-publishing