Crash du SZD-30 Pirat à Zweisimmen après une tentative de vol de pente échouée
Le 22 août 1987, un SZD-30 Pirat s'est écrasé près de Zweisimmen, en Suisse, entraînant la mort du pilote. Le pilote tentait un vol de distance FAI de 50 km dans d'excellentes conditions thermiques. Après le lâcher de remorquage, le vol s'est déroulé normalement jusqu'à ce que le planeur rencontre des difficultés près de Fromattgrat. De fortes rafales de vent et des turbulences étaient présentes dans la région. L'accident a été attribué à des tactiques de vol inadéquates le long de la crête, aggravées par des facteurs tels que les turbulences, une faible expérience de vol et une possible fatigue.
- Cross-country thermaling: After an aerotow launch from Gruyère and release over the Schopfenspitze, the pilot conducted a normal cross-country soaring flight via Gros Mont, Gastlosen, Spillgerten and Stockhorn under good thermal conditions.
- Low, turbulent ridge thermaling: Near the Fromattgrat ridge above Zweisimmen, the pilot began circling along the slope in strong southwesterly gusts and turbulence while having difficulty gaining height.
- Low terrain clearance: The glider was flown in close proximity to the sloping terrain, with a probable misjudgment of distance to the ground during ridge circling.
- Limited experience and fatigue: The pilot had relatively low overall and pre-alpine experience and may have been physically fatigued after about 2.5 hours of flight, possibly influenced by a low level of alcohol in his system.
- Continued tight circling: The pilot continued to circle at least three times along the ridge in the turbulent conditions instead of breaking off to a safer height or terrain clearance.
- Loss of safe margin: While circling close to the slope in turbulence, the glider lost its remaining safety margin to the terrain and descended toward the hillside.
- Crash - fatal: The glider impacted almost perpendicularly into the 25° grass slope at about 2007 m near the Fromattgrat, was destroyed, and the pilot sustained fatal injuries.