Crash of a Curtiss C-46A-50-CU Commando in Guatemala City: 2 killed

Date & Time: Nov 6, 1957 at 1135 LT
Type of aircraft:
Registration:
N10425
Flight Type:
Survivors:
Yes
Site:
Schedule:
Guatemala City – Belize City – Saint Petersburg
MSN:
30525
YOM:
1944
Country:
Crew on board:
2
Crew fatalities:
Pax on board:
0
Pax fatalities:
Other fatalities:
Total fatalities:
2
Captain / Total flying hours:
10729
Captain / Total hours on type:
6333.00
Copilot / Total flying hours:
3213
Copilot / Total hours on type:
710
Circumstances:
The aircraft took off from Runway 01 at La Aurora Airport at 1118LT on a scheduled cargo flight to St. Petersburg, Florida via Belize City in British Honduras. It carried a crew of two and no passengers. The flight was cleared on a visual flight rules flight plan and the take-off gross weight was 44 995 lbs including 575 gallons of fuel. At 1125LT the flight advised La Aurora Airport Control Tower that it was returning for an engine check and was cleared for an approach to Runway 19 at that airport. At approximately 1135LT the aircraft was seen to crash at a point 5,029 feet above sea level in a residential area, 3.3 miles northwest of La Aurora Airport, fatally injuring one adult and one child. Three other persons on the ground and both crew members were seriously injured. The aircraft was demolished by impact and subsequent fire.
Probable cause:
Failure of the crankshaft on the left engine and inability of the aircraft to maintain single engine flight for reasons undetermined after failure of the other engine. The following information from a preliminary report on the crankshaft by the National Bureau of Standards, has been added at the request of the Civil Aeronautics Board, Washington: "The crankshaft contained a large fatigue fracture that originated in the splined section in one of the spline fillets. The fatigue crack had penetrated through the crankshaft wall and progressed in both directions from the origin, initially following a spiral path at an angle of about 45 O to the axis of the shaft and then turning into a plane perpendicular to the shaft axis. The fatigue crack attained a total length of about 600 degrees before the final overload fracture occurred. This was a longitudinal break, about 2-1/2 inches long, between two loops of the spiral crack. The fillet where the fatigue crack started was poorly contoured and contained deep tool marks that evidently had contributed to the cause of the failure. In one fillet near the fracture origin the rough machining had produced an effective radius of about 0.005 inch. The drawing did not specify a minimum radius for the splines. It permitted a maximum radius of 0.015 inch. In the vicinity of the fracture the average hardness of the steel was 421 Vickers or about 43 Rockwell C. This indicates a tensile strength of about 200,000 psi. The drawing did not specify hardness or tensile strength except on case hardened surfaces, calling instead for 'Core Property P. W.A. No. 7, which presumably refers to a Pratt and Whitney heat treatment. The chemical composition of the crankshaft steel complied with the material specification in so far as specified elements were concerned. The steel contained appreciable amounts of molybdenum, chromium and copper, which were not specified, but the presence of these elements in the amounts found would not be expected to reduce the fatigue strength of the shaft. A small fatigue fracture that formed a part of a complete longitudinal break was found in the counterbalance bearing. This fracture apparently occurred because of unusually high loads imposed by the progression of the fatigue crack in the crankshaft. The hardness specified in the drawing for the counterbalance bearing was 34 to 38 Rockwell C. Vickers tests showed that the hardness in the part as submitted ranged from 279 to 354 Vickers or from about 27 to 36 Rockwell C. How- ever, the bearing showed evidence of overheating, which probably reduced the hardness in some areas. Chemical and spectrographic analyses showed that the composition of the counterbalance bearing material complied with the specification. "
Final Report:

Crash of a Curtiss C-46A-50-CU Commando in Saint Petersburg

Date & Time: Mar 20, 1953
Type of aircraft:
Registration:
N66559
Flight Type:
Survivors:
Yes
Schedule:
Tampa – Guatemala City
MSN:
30504
YOM:
1944
Crew on board:
3
Crew fatalities:
Pax on board:
0
Pax fatalities:
Other fatalities:
Total fatalities:
0
Circumstances:
After takeoff from Tampa Airport, on a cargo flight to Guatemala City, the crew encountered engine problems en decided to divers to St Peterburg Airport where a safe landing was completed. Technicians proceeded to several controls on both engines and nothing abnormal was reported, so the crew left St Petersburg. Shortly after takeoff, ATC reported to the crew that white smoke was spreading from the right engine. In such conditions, the crew obtained the permission to return for an emergency landing, shut down the engine and feathered the propeller. For unknown reason, the aircraft missed the runway and flew over its entire length without landing. In such situation, the pilot-in-command decided to make a go around when the airplane stalled and crashed. The aircraft was destroyed and all three occupants were injured.
Probable cause:
Failure of the right engine for unknown reason. The aircraft then stalled due to one engine inoperative and while the flaps were fully deployed, which was considered as a contributory factor.