K 8 B incident near Geissflue, Switzerland: spin leads to crash in wooded area

Geissflue, Switzerland Alexander Schleicher K 8 B

On July 23, 1970, an Alexander Schleicher K 8 B experienced a spin and crashed into a forested area near Geissflue, Switzerland. The incident occurred during a flight when the aircraft entered a spin at low altitude, resulting in a collision with the trees. The pilot sustained severe injuries, and the glider was destroyed. The official investigation confirmed that the spin was initiated due to abrupt rudder input at low speed and altitude.

  1. Ridge soaring flight: After aerotow departure from Grenchen, the pilot was ridge and thermal soaring along the Jura between Hasenmatt and Geissflue at relatively low height above terrain.
  2. Aft CG within limits: The glider’s center of gravity on this flight was at 394 mm behind the reference point, in the rear part of the allowable range, making it easier to enter a spin.
  3. Low speed near ridge: While flying slightly north of the ridge crest, the glider was being flown at relatively low airspeed and low height above the trees, reducing stall and spin margins.
  4. Abrupt left turn: West of Geissflue, over the crest, the pilot initiated a relatively abrupt left turn at low speed.
  5. Unintended left spin: The combination of low speed, brusque rudder input, and aft CG caused the K 8 B to enter a left spin with rapid height loss.
  6. Insufficient spin recovery: The pilot either did not immediately apply or could not complete effective spin recovery, and due to the very limited altitude was unable to stop the spin before ground impact.
  7. Crash - serious injury: Still in a left-turning, nose-low attitude, the glider descended about 65 m and crashed into the forested north slope below the ridge crest, seriously injuring the pilot and destroying the aircraft.
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gliderincidents.com gathers and lists soaring incident reports from official sources. The sources are indicated and linked. These reports are amended by summaries, metadata and translations, some of which have been generated utilizing machine learning (AI). You shouldn't trust the information provided here blindly, and consider reading the official incident report as a fact-check.

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