Los Angeles Times

Plane in fatal crash was overweight, NTSB says

Craft that went down in Long Beach also might have had water in its fuel tanks.

- By Kim Christense­n kim.christense­n @latimes.com

A twin-engine plane that crashed shortly after takeoff in Long Beach last year, killing several prominent community members, was 653 pounds overweight and might have had water in its fuel tanks, according to National Transporta­tion Safety Board records.

Real estate broker and cycling activist Mark Bixby, 44, a descendant of one of the city’s founding families, was among the five killed in the fiery crash of the Beech Super King 200 as it took off from Long Beach Airport for aUtah ski trip in March 2011.

Also killed were real estate investor Thomas Dean, 50; his business partner, Jeffrey Berger, 49; Bruce Krall, 51; and the pilot, Kenneth Cruz, 43. Passenger Mike Jensen, then 51, survived.

The NTSB has not cited a cause for the crash and its investigat­ion is continuing. However, the agency’s “History of Flight” details the nine-second flight and the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the accident.

According to the chronology and other records in the NTSB’s online investigat­ion file, the plane’s wings wobbled as it started to climb. It then banked sharply to the left and nose-dived into the ground.

Several witnesses told investigat­ors that they heard what sounded like engine trouble.

The maintenanc­e director at an aviation company that serviced the plane, which was owned by Dean, told investigat­ors he heard two “pops” shortly after the craft’s wheels left the runway.

He said he believed the noises were related to the engines being extinguish­ed by water in fuel tank sumps that should have been drained by the pilot before the flight.

“He didn’t believe that the accident airplane’s fuel tanks had been regularly drained since the owner bought it in the summer of 2009,” according to the NTSB’s interview of the maintenanc­e director.

If not drained, a “slug” of water would flow to the plane’s 14 fuel nozzles, shutting the engines down momentaril­y, followed by a surge of fuel that could be reignited automatica­lly, the report states.

“The [maintenanc­e director] believes the two pops he heard were attempts by the engine to relight the reintroduc­ed fuel,” the NTSB flight history stated.

The plane appeared to pull up somewhat just before the crash, records show, indicating that the engines might have restarted too late to keep it flying.

After the crash, investigat­ors calculated the craft’s weight from the amount of fuel, number of passengers and pieces of luggage it carried.

“The airplane was estimated to be approximat­ely 653 pounds overweight at takeoff,” the flight history said.

NTSB officials were not immediatel­y available to comment on the report.

 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? FIREFIGHTE­RS INSPECT the wreckage of the twin-engine aircraft that crashed last year at Long Beach Airport. Mark Bixby, a descendant of one of the city’s founding families, was among the five passengers killed.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times FIREFIGHTE­RS INSPECT the wreckage of the twin-engine aircraft that crashed last year at Long Beach Airport. Mark Bixby, a descendant of one of the city’s founding families, was among the five passengers killed.

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