NTSB Senior Investigator: Earnhardt’s Plane Had Firm Landing, Bounced Twice

The National Transportation Safety Board is busy investigating to make sense of what happened to a plane, which was carrying Dale Earnhardt Jr., along with his wife, daughter and dog, that crashed.

According to a senior investigator from the NTSB, the plane had a firm landing and bounced twice. The plane then veered off the runway, went into a ditch. The Cessna then plowed through a chain-link fence and came to a stop on a road.

Ralph Hicks addressed the media in front of the accident scene on Friday. Hicks described the weather conditions at the time of the crash at the Elizabethton Municipal Airport, “good weather, calm winds.”

“The Airplane basically bounced at least twice before coming down hard on the right wing landing gear,” Hicks explained. “You can actually see the right wing landing gear collapsing on the video.”

Hicks also said that the plane had a voice cockpit recorder which has been sent to NTSB’s headquarters in Washington, D.C. for further evaluation. Hicks says that after interviewing both pilots and the Earnhardt’s about what transpired, their answers were consistent with the recording.

Investigators will continue working on the crash site for the next two to three days and a preliminary report should be released in the next seven days on the NTSB website.

share it
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Post

The NASCAR Cup Series garage watches on as the No. 33 Richard Childress Racing team unloads its car at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
No. 33 RCR Team Allowed To Unload Car First In Touching Gesture By NASCAR
Carson Kvapil flips on Lap 2 of NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series race at Kansas Speedway.
Carson Kvapil Walks Away From Wild Flip On Lap 2 At Kansas
Kyle Busch has been hospitalized for a severe illness and will not compete in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Kyle Busch Hospitalized With Severe Illness, Will Not Race In Coca-Cola 600
The family of Kyle Busch has shared the ailments that claimed the life of the legendary race car driver.
Complications From Severe Pneumonia, Sepsis Claimed Life Of Kyle Busch
Samantha Busch and the entire Busch family joined the NASCAR community ahead of the Coca-Cola 600, the first NASCAR Cup race since the death of Kyle Busch
Samantha Busch, Busch Family Join NASCAR Community In Attending Coca-Cola 600
In the days before his death, Kyle Busch proposed a rule change to NASCAR that would allow NASCAR Cup Series drivers over 40 years old to compete full-time in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series.
O'Donnell: Kyle Busch Proposed An Over-40 Rule For Truck Series In Days Before Death

Join Our Newsletter

Ready to have NASCAR news hand-delivered to your email daily?

Related Article