Eric Janson wrote: ↑Fri Jan 23, 2026 8:32 am
1000 hour King Air Captains? Times have certainly changed!
If they'd just climbed to the MSA - taken a few extra minutes and flown the ILS this would have been a non event - jmho.
Read the report.
To be honest, it looks like a panic return after an engine fire indication where all else, was pretty much cast aside in a panic.
On the initial climbout, there was an engine fire warning and the engine was shut down. It turned out that it was a false warning. According to the report, the crew(which I assume means plural and applies to both crew members) PERCEIVED the smell of smoke from this false warning. This perception led them to believe that there was no doubt that it was an actual fire which then led to their subsequent actions(or inactions - lack of following through on SOP procedures, including discharging the fire bottle).
The idea that both of them smelled smoke does seem like a bit of a stretch to me but the TSB even put in a paragraph on ‘cross-modal linkage between the olfactory and visual senses”. I still think that it is a stretch.
It would have been nice if the TSB had interviewed the passengers to see if they smelled any smoke but if they did, they did not give us any info. Which leads to a complaint about the TSB and their lack of related info given as compared to the NTSB. The NTSB has links in reports to a docket with all kinds of easily accessible reports regarding the accident, including interviews and studies. The TSB does refer to a couple of laboratory reports but to get them, you would have to contact them and none of the reports are interviews. In addition, we never get the CVR reports in Canada and while the TSB could always say that this is because there is a federal law prohibiting it, they could petition for the law to be changed if they truly believed in the public getting more information the way they can in the US. How about it TSB? Dockets at least. It almost seems like the TSB only wants us to see what they have determined is fit for us to see, while the NTSB is an open book. A good example can be found in section 2.4(last paragraph on page 32) where the TSB discusses the pilots not activating the fire extinguisher and whether it was a conscious decision not to do so because no flames were visible or because they were not aware that the aircraft had engine fire extinguishers. But they don't tell us what the actual reason was or if they asked this question to the pilots. Did they ask? What was the reason?
Anyways, with the crew possibly in panic mode and not completing their checklists and doing an immediate return, they ended up very high on final approach. According to the report, the crew at this point had two options which were to basically dive down in a very unstabilized manner and land(which is what they did) or do a single-engine go-around(which entails potentially significant handling/performance issues from a low altitude) for another approach. But wasn't there a third option? This was to simply do a 360 degree descending turn soon after turning final when they were well above 1000' agl(or could have been a 270 degree left turn from their base leg). It could be at a fairly low with minimal controllability issues, as altitude is being lost with minimal minimal power required. Instead, the nose was pushed down and the cross the threshold of the 11,000’ runway at 400’ but also at 200 knots. Idle power on PT-6 engines does give lots of drag but one engine had been feathered which reduces the drag significantly.
One could bring up the supposed terrain issues as ATC had initially offered vectors with a climb to 3000 as their minimum vectoring altitude but the crew was happy to stay at 2200' and eventually navigate back themselves. The report does not state how familiar they were with the airport but if they were, they would know that there is no close-in terrain.
Bottom line, they touched down with not much runway left and hydroplaned on the wet runway and had directional issues with what was likely a selection of close to or at maximum reverse on one engine.
One can certainly make the argument that there is no time to waste for a fire indication, if you smell smoke but some runways have dangerous terrain or drop-offs just beyond the end of them.
The pilots were given bad info from their aircraft but the reality is that a lot of engine fire indications are false. Is the wing going to fall off if a 360 is done to lose altitude? This isn’t a DC-4/6 where that is a serious, immediate concern. Some might remember earlier threads(where I got the usual grief in responses) where I predicted this….
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Fortunately, this overrun wasn’t catastrophic, but it could be some of the small, northern airports I have been to.