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Lily "MinekPo1" · 2mo

On july 4, 2023, 13:57 local time , a pilot of a Cessna 172N in Murrieta, California was taking his family for scenic flights after receiving his private pilot certificate
about 2 weeks earlier. They completed one successful flight and then departed on the second,
which was the accident flight. Upon returning to their departure airport, the airplane landed
normally, but during the landing roll, the front seat passenger heard a “pop” sound and
subsequently felt the airplane shake, at which time the pilot started to panic. The pilot
advanced the throttle and the airplane lifted off the runway surface again. Surveillance video
captured the airplane as it began to climb in a nose-high attitude, drifted left of the runway,
then rolled inverted and rapidly descended.
Postaccident examination of the airplane and engine revealed no preimpact mechanical
anomalies that would have precluded normal operation. The wing flaps were found in the
retracted position. The source of the “pop” sound reported by the passenger could not be
determined, nor could it be determined why the pilot chose to take off immediately after having
successfully touched down on the runway, as he had planned a full-stop landing. The reported
wind at the time of the accident indicated a headwind accompanied by a right crosswind that
was within the airplane’s maximum demonstrated crosswind component.
The circumstances of the accident are consistent with the pilot’s exceedance of the airplane’s
critical angle of attack during takeoff, which resulted in an aerodynamic stall and loss of
control. Evidence shows that the pilot retracted the flaps from the fully extended position to
the flaps up position while the airplane was in a high angle of attack as it veered left of the
runway towards buildings. The sudden retraction of flaps at a low altitude would have resulted
in a loss of lift and a descent, which likely contributed to the loss of control. The NTSB report determined the probable cause of the accident to be tThe pilot’s exceedance of the airplane’s critical angle of attack during takeoff, which resulted
in an aerodynamic stall and loss of control. Contributing to the loss of control was the pilot’s
sudden retraction of the flaps.

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