The NTSB says a pilot of a plane that crashed and killed him and a passenger in New York was warned before takeoff that the craft shouldn’t be flown.
Newsday says the National Transportation Safety Board report says a mechanic told David McElroy the plane had a faulty tachometer and shouldn’t be flown. The instrument measures engine revolutions.
The report also says that a friend of the pilot told investigators the single-engine Socata TB10 had problems climbing three days before the crash.
The lone survivor, Erik Unhjem, said he was unaware of the conversation between the mechanic and the pilot. His wife, Jane, was killed in the crash.
The Unhjems, of Goshen. N.Y., were interested in buying the aircraft and had taken it for a test flight when it crashed last August.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Billionaire NFL Owner Suing Over Billboards Near His SoFi Stadium
Musk’s xAI Faces California AG Probe Over Grok Sexual Images
OpenAI And Microsoft Sued Over Murder-Suicide Blamed on ChatGPT
Surging Oil Tanker Insurance Points to Growing Black Sea Chaos