Safety board confirms lingering design problem behind N.W.T. float-plane crash
EDMONTON — The Transportation Safety Board says a design problem that has remained unaddressed for decades in a popular small airplane contributed to three deaths in a crash in the Northwest Territories.
“Transport Canada and the board don’t believe that design meets the intent of the criteria that the aircraft was certified under,” said Gerrit Vermeer, a senior board investigator.
On Thursday, the board released its investigation into an August 2018 crash of a Cessna 206 during a sightseeing flight to Nahanni National Park.
The five-passenger, float-equipped plane was landing on Little Doctor Lake when the right wing hit the water. The plane flipped upside down and was partially submerged.