Lethbridge Herald

Plane, weather issues ruled out in crash

CALGARY PILOT DIED IN AIR SHOW WRECK AT COLD LAKE

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — EDMONTON

Mechanical issues and weather were not factors in the fatal crash of a private singleengi­ne plane in front of horrified spectators at an air show in Alberta.

The Transporta­tion Safety Board of Canada says a review of the wreckage determined that the engine and flight controls were operating normally on the T-28B Trojan aircraft.

Pilot Bruce Evans of Calgary was performing acrobatic manoeuvres at the Cold Lake Air Show in July 2016 when something went wrong.

The plane hit the ground at high velocity in a near-vertical position.

No air show personnel or spectators were injured.

The TSB report says Evans appeared to have modified the order of his manoeuvres about halfway through his performanc­e, but adds that is not unusual for an aerobatic performer.

“The pilot flew from show right to left at about 500 feet above ground level, within the defined airspace for the routine, then entered a roll just before show centre,” says the report released Friday.

“As the aircraft reached the inverted position, the roll stopped and the nose began to pitch toward the ground ... the aircraft continued toward the ground in an arc until its collision with terrain.”

The report says Evans had performed the routine without incident the previous day.

Weather observatio­ns shortly after the crash reported light winds and a few clouds at higher elevations.

Although it was the pilot’s first show of the season, he had participat­ed in several events in 2015 without any problems, the report says.

Evans had years of experience. The TSB says he earned a private pilot’s licence in 1993, a commercial licence in 1995 and an airline transport licence in 2015.

He had accumulate­d just over 4,043 flying hours. About 460 of those were on the T-28B Trojan.

Evans grew up in a Canadian Air Force family. His biography on the Cold Lake Air Show’s website at the time said his father was an aircraft maintenanc­e engineer.

It also said Evans was from Calgary and ran his own aerial geophysica­l survey company, Firefly Airborne Surveys, which combined his training as a profession­al geologist and passion for aviation.

He purchased the Trojan in 2007. It was manufactur­ed in 1954 and served in the U.S. Navy.

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