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Report shares new details on fatal Nevada plane crash last month

A Cessna T206H is seen in a stock photo. A similar plane was involved a midair collision in nor ...

Dashcam footage of a fatal midair collision last month between two small planes in northern Nevada showed one of the planes “erupting in flames and falling near vertical” into a field, the National Transportation Safety Board said in a preliminary report released Tuesday.

A Cessna T206H and a Globe Swift GC-1B collided in flight near the Minden-Tahoe Airport on Sept. 16. The crash killed the Swift’s pilot, who was identified as Donald Bartholomew, 74, of Gardnerville, The Record Courier reported.

According to the report, one of the Cessna’s two pilots, who was performing a flight examination, heard a radio call from another airplane that stated they were going to approach a runway at the airport. The two pilots in the Cessna began looking for the other airplane, but could not see it outside the plane or on their ADS-B, a surveillance technology used by aircraft.

As the Cessna’s pilot was making a radio call of his position while descending, the Cessna struck the Swift, but the Cessna pilot said he never saw the airplane and “instead believed that the engine or propeller blade experienced a catastrophic failure,” the report states.

After the Cessna’s windscreen became covered in oil, the instructor pilot made an emergency landing at one of the airport’s runways.

The collision was captured on the dashcam of a vehicle driving north on U.S. Highway 395, which showed the Swift crossing west over the freeway at a “slightly” higher altitude than the Cessna before the crash.

Clips of dashcam footage showing the seconds before and after a Cessna T206H and a Globe Swift GC-1B collided in midair near the Minden-Tahoe Airport on Monday, Sept. 16, 2024. (National Transportation Safety Board)

After the crash, the Swift caught fire and fell into a field near the airport.

NTSB said in the report that it could not determine if the Swift had attempted the evade the other airplane before the crash or if either plane had navigation and strobe lights on.

The Swift did not have ADS-B surveillance technology, and NTSB said no radar data from the plane was available at the time of the report.

Wreckage spread over 1,205 feet

A map of the main debris field for the Globe Swift GC-1B that crashed near the Minden-Tahoe Airport on Monday, Sept. 16, 2024. (National Transportation Safety Board)

The Swift’s wreckage showed that the plane sustained “significant” fire damage, primarily to the cockpit, according to the report.

Debris from the crash was spread out over 1,025 feet across the two fields, which included fragments from both the Cessna and Swift. The Swift’s main tail was found 450 feet from the main wreckage, and was missing several pieces.

A post-accident investigation found that the Swift’s tailwheel was also “lodged entirely underneath” the Cessna’s engine at the front of the Cessna’s plane, obscured from view, the report said.

Parts of the Globe Swift GC-1B found in the Cessna T206H and in the debris field after the Swift crashed into the Cessna on Monday, Sept. 16, 2024 near the Minden-Tahoe Airport. (National Transportation Safety Board)

In the report, a friend of the Swift’s pilot said the pilot was “meticulous and would consistently follow the same routines during flights,” and added that the pilot was “diligent about listening for traffic and maintaining a constant lookout for other aircraft in the area.”

Contact Taylor Lane at tlane@reviewjournal.com.

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