Page:CAB Accident Report, American Airlines Flight on 22 December 1934.pdf/1

 DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCEBUREAU OF COMMERCEWASHINGTON April 17, 1935.

To the Secretary of Commerce:

On December 22, 1934 at about 3:45 a.m. near Sunbright, Tennessee, an airplane being used in scheduled flight carrying mail and express, crashed with resultant death to the pilot and the complete destruction of the aircraft and cargo.

The pilot, Russell S. Riggs, held a Department of Commerce transport pilot's license and had a scheduled air transport rating. The plane, owned and operated by the American Air Lines, was a Lockheed Orion, model 9-D, and bore Department of Commerce license number NC-12286. This was a mail and express schedule and passengers ware not permitted to be carried.

The plane was being flown between Cleveland, Ohio and Fort Worth, Texas. The pilot had departed from Louisville, Kentucky for Nashville, Tennessee, the next scheduled stop, at about 2:40 a.m. He was contacted by radio about twelve minutes after his departure and gave his position as twenty miles southwest of Louisville, following the Nashville radio beam and flying over top of the clouds at an altitude of 6,000 feet. For some reason, no further radio contacts could be made. The plane was found the following day near Sunbright, Tennessee, completely wrecked and burned.

There were no witnesses to the accident. Marks on the ground indicated that the pilot was flying in a southeast direction and had no idea of his proximity to the mountain on which he crashed. The ground at this point was 2850 feet above sea level, which would indicate that the pilot was letting down through the clouds to check his location, most likely thinking that he was on course and in the vicinity of the airport. Actually, however, he was 110 miles to the East of the airport and, from the elapsed flying time, must have flown an approximate straight line course from Louisville to where the accident occurred. Riggs was an experienced instrument pilot and why, with radio beacon facilities, he missed his course by 34° will probably never be known. There was nothing to indicate mechanical or structural failure of the airplane or engine.

Available evidence concerning this accident is so meager that any conclusions as to the probable cause must remain a matter of conjecture. Several theories are suggested but the fact that no radio contacts were made with any station after the first twelve minutes after take-off discounts most of them. A failure in the battery-generator system offers as explanation for the entire flight sequence as would no other theory. It is almost certain that the ship's radio went out of commission. After the first radio contact, nothing more was heard from the pilot and it is only reasonable to assume that the pilot would have made and received some calls, had his radio been functioning. Also had the pilot been able to receive the radio directional beam signals, he would have known through the weakness or lack of