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Aircraft Mechanic: Ercoupe Was Fine

 Gary Pinnell/Highlands Today

 The light airplane flown by missionary pilot James Weener erupted in a 
black cloud. 
The white tail section landed among group of trees beside Golf Hammock's 
10th fairway.
 By GARY PINNELL
 Highlands Today
 Published: January 14, 2009
 SEBRING - On Dec. 13, one witness was outside talking with a neighbor when 
he saw an Ercoupe 415-D flying southwest.
 The plane, tail number N99154, dipped and turned to the right, the witness 
told National Transportation Safety Board investigator Dennis Diaz.
 "Then the airplane pulled up severely and started turning to the left," 
said the witness, who was quoted but not named in the preliminary report filed 
by Diaz.
 "As the airplane continued upward and banked to the left, something shiny 
exited from the tail area of the airplane," Diaz wrote. "The witness 
remarked to his neighbor, 'What the heck is he dumping?' and the airplane then 
began to break apart."
 Although other witnesses heard popping noises and saw black or gray smoke, 
Diaz's witness added he heard no explosion and did not observe smoke or 
fire.
 What is undisputed and what most pilots can barely fathom is that the 
Ercoupe broke up on a clear, slightly windy Saturday afternoon and crashed into 
the Golf Hammock golf course.
 The certificated commercial pilot, 70-year-old James Weener, was thanking 
a passenger, James Ricker, 46, for his service to the local missionary 
village. Both fell from the swiftly disintegrating aircraft and died.
 Weener's most recent FAA medical certificate was issued June 2, 2008. 
According to his most recent logbook, which began on May 3, 2001, he had 7,126 
hours of flight experience - 12 hours in the accident airplane's make and 
model.
 The 62-year-old plane, which had accumulated 2,588 hours in the air when 
the airplane's most recent annual inspection was completed on May 9, 2008, 
departed Avon Park Executive Airport (AVO) about 11:15 a.m. The accident 
happened about 12:06 p.m.
 Ercoupe pilots, by the way, insist the plane has an excellent safety 
record.
 "According to a friend of the accident pilot, who was also a certificated 
aircraft mechanic, he and the pilot flew together in the accident airplane 
immediately prior to the accident flight," Diaz wrote. "The friend did not 
note any abnormalities with the performance of either the airplane or the 
pilot during their flight, and upon returning to AVO, the friend disembarked 
the 
airplane and the accident passenger boarded," Diaz wrote.
 "Another witness, who was also a certificated airline transport pilot, 
stated that while outside working on his house he observed the accident 
airplane flying overhead," Diaz wrote. "He estimated that the airplane was 
flying 
at an altitude of about 1,200 feet above ground level, and did not note 
anything abnormal about its flight path. About 45 minutes after first seeing 
the 
airplane, he heard an abnormal engine sound that diverted his attention 
again back to it."
 It sounded as if the engine was being "over-sped," the second unnamed 
witness told Diaz. It was as if the engine was at full power, and the airplane 
was in a high-speed dive. When the witness looked up, he saw the airplane 
pitching up and rolling into a steep left bank, and initially thought that the 
pilot was attempting to perform a "barrel-roll or a slow roll."
 The Breakup
 No, friends of Weener say. He wasn't the type to thrill passengers with 
aerobatics.

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