Imperial Valley Press

Lost in fog: Kobe copter crash highlights danger for pilots

- By DAVID KOENIG

The federal investigat­ion into the helicopter crash that killed former NBA star Kobe Bryant and eight others has put a renewed spotlight on a long-known danger of flying: Pilots who become disoriente­d when they can’t see their surroundin­gs.

Investigat­ors said Tuesday that pilot Ara Zobayan lost his bearings during the Jan. 26, 2020, flight when he flew fast into low clouds.

National Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­ors said that when Zobayan told air traffic controller­s he was climbing to get above the clouds, he was instead beginning a rapid descent that would end with a crash into a hillside north of Los Angeles.

Spatial disorienta­tion is the inability of a pilot to sense how fast or high they are flying and whether the aircraft is pointed up or down, or banking left or right. It occurs when the vestibular system — the body’s balancing mechanism in the inner ear — sends the wrong signal to the brain.

“It’s like diving into black water at night and you’re just floating,” said Randy Waldman, a longtime helicopter and airplane flight instructor in Burbank, California. “You don’t know if you’re going up or down of left or right.”

Pilot and former

Air

Force Thunderbir­ds Commander Richard McSpadden said pilots must train to act against their instincts when they become disoriente­d.

“We learn walking around and driving our cars to rely on our sense of balance, our gut feel,” he said. “As a pilot, you have to train yourself to disregard that. What (your body) is telling you is wrong, and it will kill you.”

The danger of such disorienta­tion has been known for decades. In the 1950s, researcher­s at the University of Illinois put 20 pilots through a simulator and none recovered after flying into bad weath

er and losing visual cues. The study led to brochures and videos called “178 Seconds to Live.” The Federal Aviation Administra­tion says 5% to 10% of all general aviation accidents are blamed on spatial disorienta­tion, and 90% of such incidents are fatal.

The NTSB said disorienta­tion was to blame for 184 fatal aviation accidents — 20 of them involving helicopter­s — in the past 10 years. In 1999, John F. Kennedy Jr., who was not certified for instrument­s-only flight, likely crashed into the ocean off Massachuse­tts after being disoriente­d by haze that obscured the horizon, the

safety board determined.

Instrument flying is standard among airline and military pilots and used when conditions don’t allow a pilot to fly by sight. Zobayan had limited experience with instrument flying. That also is frequently true of general-aviation pilots like Kennedy Jr., who expect to navigate by seeing landmarks on the ground.

Even pilots who don’t expect to fly by instrument­s must receive some training in the skill. This is done by going “under the hood” — flying while wearing a visor to block their view outside the plane or helicopter.

 ?? James Anderson/National Transporta­tion Safety Board via AP ?? In this 2020 file photo, provided by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, NTSB investigat­ors Adam Huray, right, and Carol Hogan examine wreckage as part of the NTSB’s investigat­ion of a helicopter crash near Calabasas,
Calif.
James Anderson/National Transporta­tion Safety Board via AP In this 2020 file photo, provided by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, NTSB investigat­ors Adam Huray, right, and Carol Hogan examine wreckage as part of the NTSB’s investigat­ion of a helicopter crash near Calabasas, Calif.

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