Colisión del Ventus C con el terreno cerca de St. Stephan resultando en fatalidad
El 30 de julio de 2000, un planeador Schempp-Hirth Ventus C colisionó con el terreno cerca de St. Stephan, Suiza. El piloto, un ciudadano suizo nacido en 1951, realizaba un vuelo privado durante un campamento de vuelo en planeador alpino. Testigos observaron que el planeador entró en un descenso pronunciado antes de impactar verticalmente contra el suelo. El piloto resultó fatalmente herido en el accidente. La investigación no encontró fallas técnicas en la aeronave, y el incidente probablemente se debió a razones médicas, aunque esto no pudo confirmarse con certeza.
- Cruise thermaling flight: After an aerotow departure from Zweisimmen at 13:45, the pilot was cruising and circling in lift near the Wistätthorn with other gliders during an alpine soaring camp.
- Onset of steep descent: While flying a wide, normal-looking turn east of the Wistätthorn ridge, the glider suddenly began to lower its nose rapidly during the next 90 degrees of turn for no apparent operational or technical reason.
- Possible medical incapacitation: The pilot had significant coronary artery narrowing that could have led to reduced heart muscle oxygenation and possible loss of consciousness, and no technical or handling issues were found to explain the maneuver.
- No visible recovery action: Throughout the ensuing 270-degree turn with an increasingly nose-down attitude, witnesses observed no apparent corrective control inputs or pull-out from the dive by the pilot.
- Vertical high-speed dive: The glider transitioned into a near-vertical attitude and continued straight down for approximately the last 100 meters at an estimated much higher speed, with airbrakes partially extended at impact.
- Crash - fatal: The glider impacted the terrain almost vertically and buried its nose in the ground, destroying the aircraft and fatally injuring the pilot.