N613FT
Operators of this aircraft
Who operated this tail, and how firmly we know it.
| Operator | Role | Period | Basis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Florida Institute of Technology | Operator | on 2009-03-16 | Operator named in NTSB report |
Accident & incident history
Maintenance disclosures
Service Difficulty Reports filed with the FAA for this airframe. Filing is largely voluntary — the number of reports is not a measure of reliability. To verify a report, search its control number at the FAA SDRS site.
2 reports on file, 2009-04-10 – 2018-04-09.
Part: SPAR — CORRODED (LT WING)
DURING SPECIAL INSPECTION OF LEFT AND RIGHT FORWARD WING ATTACH BRACKETS, IT WAS DISCOVERED THAT BOTH BRACKETS HAD CORROSION DAMAGE TO SPAR AND CORRODED RIVETS, DUE TO LACK OF A BARRIER BETWEEN STEEL BRACKET AND ALUMINUM SPAR.
Part: ENGINE — BURNED · airframe 14,453 hrs
THE ACFT EXPERIENCED A COMPLETE LOSS OF ENGINE POWER AFTER LANDING. THE PILOT TRIED TO RESTART THE ACFT ENGINE TWICE, WHILE ON RUNWAY 27R. AFTER ALLOWING APPROX 20 SECONDS FOR THE STARTER TO COOL THE PILOT NOTICED SMOKE FOLLOWED BY FLAMES. THE PILOT EXITED THE ACFT WITH THE HALON FIRE EXTINGUISHER IN HAND, BUT THE EXTINGUISHER WAS INOPERATIVE. THE PILOT ALSO NOTICED A STEADY STREAM OF FUEL POURING FROM THE UNDERSIDE OF THE COWLING, AS THE FLAMES ENGULFED THE ENTIRE ENGINE COMPARTMENT. THE EXAMINATION REVEALED THAT THE ENTIRE ENGINE COMPARTMENT, INCLUDING THE POWERPLANT, ITS ACCESSORIES, MOUNT, HARDWARE, COWLINGS AND FIRE-WALL HAD BEEN DAMAGED BY THE HEAT AND FIRE. THE FIRE APPEARED TO HAVE STARTED NEAR THE AIR BOX ON THE BOTTOM LT OF THE ENGINE AND IGNITED THE FUEL THAT HAD OVER FLOWED INTO AIR BOX. CONSEQUENTLY, THE AIR BOX APPEARED TO HAVE BEEN BLOWN APART FROM THE INSIDE OUT, AS IF IT WAS FULL OF FUEL WHEN IT IGNITED. THE FIRE THEN SPREAD TO COVER THE ENTIRE ENGINE COMPARTMENT CAUSING INTENSE HEAT AND FIRE DAMAGE THROUGH OUT.