Las Vegas Review-Journal

Reno air races report out

NTSB: Pilot confusion preceded September’s midair collision

- By Scott Sonner

RENO — A preliminar­y investigat­ion suggests there was confusion among pilots just before a fatal midair collision at the National Championsh­ip Air Races last month but sheds little light on why.

The National Transporta­tion

Safety Board released a four-page report Wednesday with some of the few details investigat­ors have pieced together in their preliminar­y probe of the cause of the Sept. 17 crash that killed veteran California pilots Chris Rushing of Thousands Oaks and

Nick Macy of Tulelake.

Rushing had just won the T-6 title race and Macy had finished second when their vintage single-engine planes collided as they were moving into position about 300 feet off the ground to land at the Reno-stead Airport, witnesses told the NTSB.

The third-place pilot, Vic Mcmann of Vancouver, British Columbia, said neither was where he thought they would normally be before he lost sight of them as they prepared to approach the runway along what’s referred to as the “base leg” of the air traffic pattern, according to the NTSB report.

Mcmann said he continued to slow his airplane to “create some space and time to see them.” As he got closer to the runway he spotted Macy’s plane and then “finally spotted” Rushing’s plane below his position to the right. At that point, he could see Macy’s plane in level flight, to his left. “Both airplanes were not where he expected them to be,” the report said.

He said Rushing “crossed in front of his position from right to left and disappeare­d” on the right side before Macy disappeare­d under his left wing.

“Shortly after, he observed Rushing where he expected him to be in level flight … briefly before it began to roll to the right and descend,” the report said.

Another witness stated that when the collision occurred Macy was at about a 75-degree angle headed downward in relation to Rushing’s path, the report said.

A final report on the cause of the crash isn’t expected for at least another year.

Aviation industry experts have said they were dumbfounde­d that such experience­d pilots ended up colliding.

Reno Air Racing Associatio­n CEO Fred Telling was among those who noted the large wings on the planes used to train World War II pilots can restrict visibility for the pilot of a plane flying above another.

“If you are in a turn, something immediatel­y below you would be blanked out,” Telling said last month. “Or it could have been the glare of the sun.”

The collision brought an abrupt end to what was to be the celebrated finale of Reno’s run as the home of the national championsh­ips since 1964.

Event organizers were already looking for a new home for the competitio­n after this year, partly because of rising insurance costs since 2011. That year a P-51D Mustang suffered a mechanical failure and crashed into the apron in front of the grandstand, killing the pilot and 10 spectators and seriously injuring 70 others. It was one of the deadliest air show disasters in U.S. history.

 ?? Adam R. Mayberry Truckee Meadows Fire & Rescue ?? Emergency crews look over aircraft wreckage in Reno on Sept. 17 after two California pilots were killed when their planes collided in midair after completing a race at the National Championsh­ip Air Races at Reno-stead Airport north of the city.
Adam R. Mayberry Truckee Meadows Fire & Rescue Emergency crews look over aircraft wreckage in Reno on Sept. 17 after two California pilots were killed when their planes collided in midair after completing a race at the National Championsh­ip Air Races at Reno-stead Airport north of the city.

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