Occurrence Type: | Accident |
Date: | November 12, 2022, (UTC-6) |
Summary: | Mid-air collision at Wings Over Dallas air show, under investigation |
Site: | Dallas Executive Airport (RBD), Dallas, Texas |
Total Fatalities: | 6 |
Total Survivors: | 0 |
Plane1 Image: | Douglas B-17G-95-DL Flying Fortress ‘VP-X - L - 483872 - X’ “Texas Raiders” (NL7227C) (50657253887).jpg |
Plane1 Caption: | N7227C, the B-17G involved in the accident, in October 2019 |
Aircraft Type: | Boeing B-17G-95-DL/PB-1W Flying Fortress |
Tail Number: | N7227C 44-83872 (s/n) 77235 (BuNo) |
Aircraft Name: | Texas Raiders |
Plane1 Operator: | American Airpower Heritage Flying Museum |
Plane1 Occupants: | 5 |
Plane1 Crew: | 5 |
Plane1 Fatalities: | 5 |
Plane1 Survivors: | 0 |
Plane2 Image: | Bell P-63F-1-BE Kingcobra ‘X - 311719’ (N6763) (50909030776).jpg |
Plane2 Caption: | N6763, the Bell P-63F involved in the accident, in October 2019 |
Plane2 Type: | Bell P-63F-1-BE Kingcobra |
Plane2 Tailnum: | N6763 43-11719 (s/n) |
Plane2 Origin: | Dallas Executive Airport, Dallas, Texas |
Plane2 Operator: | American Airpower Heritage Flying Museum |
Plane2 Occupants: | 1 |
Plane2 Crew: | 1 |
Plane2 Fatalities: | 1 |
Plane2 Survivors: | 0 |
Origin: | Dallas Executive Airport, Dallas, Texas |
On November 12, 2022, two World War II–era aircraft, a B-17 Flying Fortress and a Bell P-63 Kingcobra, collided mid-air and crashed during the Wings Over Dallas air show at Dallas Executive Airport in Dallas, Texas, United States.[1] The air show, which coincided with Veterans Day commemorations, was organized by the Commemorative Air Force.
Just before the crash, the air boss directed the bomber formation to fly parallel to the spectator viewing line, while the fighters were instructed to enter a trail formation and fly in front of the bombers. According to witnesses, the P-63F executed a high-speed descending banked turn onto the runway approach, colliding with the B-17 and causing both planes to break apart and burst into flames.
The B-17 had a crew of five, while the P-63 had a single occupant. All six died as confirmed by the Dallas County Medical Examiner. Both aircraft were destroyed on impact. On November 30, the NTSB released a preliminary report, highlighting the absence of altitude deconfliction briefings and revealing that the P-63's GPS navigator failed to record any information during the flight, with the ATC audio released on January 12, 2023, confirming no altitude advice was provided.
The B-17 involved was Texas Raiders, a Douglas Long Beach–built B-17G-95-DL, aircraft registration number N7227C, which first entered service in 1945 and was operated by American Airpower Heritage Flying Museum. It was one of the few surviving B-17 Flying Fortress aircraft that remained airworthy.[2] [3] The second aircraft involved was a P-63F-1-BE Kingcobra registered N6763, which was also operated by American Airpower Heritage Flying Museum.[4] This plane was one of only two examples of the P-63F variant ever built.[5]
The crash occurred at 1:22p.m.[6] local time at the Dallas Executive Airport during a Wings Over Dallas air show organized by the Commemorative Air Force, a non-profit organization whose goal is to preserve historic aircraft. The air show, hosted over a commemorative Veteran's Day weekend, had drawn more than 4,000 spectators. Both aircraft were typically piloted by highly trained volunteers, in many cases retired professional pilots.[7] Texas Raiders was the lead aircraft of a five-bomber formation, and the P-63F was the third aircraft of a three-fighter formation.
ADS-B data and recorded radio transmissions reveal that the air boss instructed the bomber formation to follow the show line, which runs parallel to and is situated away from the spectator viewing line. Concurrently, the fighters were directed to adopt a trail formation—where wingmen fly below and behind the lead aircraft—and advance along the 500feet show line, positioning themselves in front of the bomber formation. The apparent intent, according to a pilot observing the action from the ground, was to put themselves in front of the bomber.[8] According to witness accounts, the P-63F was performing a high-speed descending banked turn onto the runway approach. It collided with the B-17 on the rear port quarter from above, severing the B-17's fuselage from a point just aft of its wings. Both aircraft broke apart and hit the ground seconds afterward, exploding and erupting into flames.[9]
A pilot on the ground, who observed the mid-air collision, speculated that the P-63F pilot might have mistaken one of the trailing bombers for the leader. This misidentification could have led the pilot to believe he had already cleared the bomber formation's flight path. Consequently, he tightened his trajectory and positioned the P-63F's belly towards the bomber line, inadvertently obscuring his view of the approaching B-17.
All six crew members on board both aircraft were killed, making it the Commemorative Air Force's first fatal accident in 17 years.[10] [11] No injuries or fatalities were reported on the ground.[12] The five fatalities aboard the B-17 were: Terry Michael Barker, Kevin Dimitri "K5" Michels, Daniel Alexander Ragan, Leonard Lloyd "Len" Root and Curtis James Rowe. Craig Stephen Hutain was identified as the sole occupant and pilot of the single-seat Bell P-63.[13] [14]
Terry Barker was a former American Airlines pilot from 1984 to 2020, a former Army helicopter pilot (1975–1978) and former city council member in Keller, Texas.[15] [16] Craig Hutain, the pilot and fatality aboard the Bell P-63, had started flying solo at the age of 17 and was a former commercial pilot for Rocky Mountain Airways (1982–1985) and United Airlines (1985–2022). Hutain started flying as a child with his father, a World War II veteran, and was a pilot for the "Tora! Tora! Tora!" air show, a reenactment of the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
Kevin "K5" Michels, the youngest of the deceased, was an active member of the Commemorative Air Force acting as historian, media representative and tour supervisor for the organization. Len Root was a retired commercial pilot who had flown for American Airlines from 1986 to 2021. Dan Ragan was a U.S. Navy veteran of the Korean War, who served as a radio operator in the 1950s on the naval variant of the B-17, which was designated PB-1W. He lived in Dallas and was a native of Tulsa, Oklahoma.[17] [18] Major Curtis J. Rowe was from Hilliard, Ohio and was a member of the Ohio Wing Civil Air Patrol since 1988.[19]
Following the crash, both the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) launched investigations into the accident. On November 14, the NTSB announced that the wreckage of the P-63 had been moved to a "secure location", while the recovery of the B-17 wreckage was delayed by rain. The NTSB confirmed that neither aircraft was equipped with a flight data recorder, but that a GPS navigator from the P-63 and an electronic flight display from the B-17 had been recovered and were being taken to an NTSB laboratory in Washington, D.C. to be processed for "data and relevant information".[20]
On November 30, the NTSB released a preliminary report. The report noted the lack of "altitude deconflictions briefed before the flight or while the airplanes were in the air". That is, the aircraft were allowed to operate at the same altitude. The report also noted that the GPS navigator in the P-63 did not record any information during the flight. On January 12, 2023, the ATC audio was released indicating that no altitude advice was given to the pilots.[21] [22] The P-63F involved in the accident was known to have compromised visibility from the cockpit due to metal reinforcements.[23]
On March 8, 2024, the NTSB released the full docket on the mid-air collision to the public.[24]
Several Texas officials reacted publicly to the crash. The president of the Commemorative Air Force, which organized the show, said that this kind of mid-air collision during an air show was "extremely rare".[25]