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Old 05-02-2006 | 04:36 PM
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deadstick
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Local Newspaper Story

Test pilot’s plane broke up in storm

04/28/06
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The wreckage of famed test pilot Scott Crossfield’s single-engine plane indicates it broke apart over North Georgia during a severe thunderstorm, according to a National Transportation Safety Board report.

Crossfield, who in the early 1950s was the first person to fly at twice the speed of sound, died April 19 while en route from Prattville, Ala., to his home in Manassas, Va., in his Cessna 210A.

The 84-year-old pilot was the only person aboard when the plane crashed into mountainous terrain in Gordon County.

The NTSB report, released Thursday, said Crossfield checked in with Atlanta air traffic controllers and shortly after 11 a.m. asked to turn to the south because of bad storms in the region.

Radar contact was lost at 11:10 a.m. when the plane was at 5,500 feet, just after the plane entered a Level 6 thunderstorm, the severest type, the report said.

The Federal Aviation Administration says a Level 6 storm is characterized by high wind and severe turbulence.

The report said debris from the aircraft was found in two areas about a mile apart, with the main wreckage in a crater 4 feet deep.

Associated Press
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