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Aviation News Talk – Pilot Stories, Safety Tips & General Aviation News

412 Cirrus SR22T N17DT Stall Crash: Flaps Retracted on Low-Power Approach + GA News

Aviation News Talk – Pilot Stories, Safety Tips & General Aviation News

Glass Cockpit Publishing

News, Aviation, Leisure

4.8730 Ratings

🗓️ 1 February 2026

⏱️ 73 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Max talks with Rob Mark about the fatal crash of Cirrus SR22T N17DT near Shelbyville, Indiana, and why this accident is so instructive for any pilot who flies approaches at low altitude with high workload. The NTSB's probable cause centers on inadequate airspeed and an aerodynamic stall, but the real value is in the flight data that shows how the airplane got there: low power held for an extended period, repeated stall warnings, multiple ESP interventions, and flaps that ultimately remained retracted until impact.

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This episode matters because it's rare to have this level of detail. The NTSB recovered onboard data that captures dozens of parameters multiple times per second—far more than you usually get from ADS-B alone. Max describes how the NTSB published extensive graphs and also released a spreadsheet of recorded parameters. The spreadsheet didn't include position data, so Max combined it with ADS-B track points and interpolated the missing locations to create a second-by-second reconstruction. The result is a cockpit-style view that shows airspeed, pitch attitude, power, flap position, stall warning activations, and ESP engagement together—so you can see the chain of events, not just the endpoint.

The key factual finding: the engine was operating normally. The "partial engine failure" theories that circulated right after the crash don't hold up against the final report and recorded parameters. Instead, power was pulled back to a very low setting—about 15%, roughly 10–11 inches of manifold pressure—and held there. That's close to a landing-power setting, which means airspeed and energy must be managed carefully to avoid drifting toward stall, especially if configuration changes.

The second key finding is configuration. The flap record shows the flaps briefly at about 50% and then transitioning to 0%. Later, the data shows the flaps again toggling, but ultimately the airplane ends up with flaps retracted and stays that way until the crash. That detail is not cosmetic—stall speed is strongly affected by flap setting. In a low-power approach, retracting flaps increases stall speed and requires a different pitch picture and energy plan. If the airplane is flown as if it has more lift available than it actually does, airspeed can silently bleed away.

As the airplane slowed, the recorded data shows repeated stall warning activations in the final minute, and ESP (Envelope Stability Protection) engaging multiple times. ESP is designed to help discourage pilots from exceeding the envelope by nudging pitch and roll back toward safer values, but it can't create airspeed or altitude. It's a guardrail, not an autopilot that can save a low-altitude slow-speed situation once the margin is gone. In the reconstruction, stall warnings and ESP engagement cluster around the periods when the airplane is slow, pitched up, and operating near the edge of the envelope.

Witness observations align with a low-altitude stall sequence. A driver on a nearby interstate described the airplane as very low, appearing to "hang," then making a sharp turn. The witness observed a wing drop and rapid rocking from one wing vertical to the other before the aircraft disappeared behind trees and a fireball was seen seconds later. The NTSB's recorded data similarly shows the airplane slowing near stall speed followed by a loss of control consistent with a stall at low altitude.

The practical lessons are direct and transferable to any airplane, not just a Cirrus. First, treat any stall warning on approach as a command—not a suggestion. You don't troubleshoot while the airplane is approaching the critical angle of attack. Your first move is to reduce angle of attack (unload) and regain airspeed. Second, make configuration errors harder to commit and easier to catch. Flap position is not a "set it and forget it" item when workload is high. Use callouts, verify indications, and confirm the pitch picture matches the configuration you think you have. Third, recognize that "low-power" plus "slow" plus "turning" is the classic trap. Bank increases stall speed, and when you're low, you don't have the altitude budget to recover from a stall break and wing drop.

Finally, this episode reinforces a mindset: the accident wasn't one bad second; it was a sequence of small choices and small drifts that added up to zero margin. The data shows multiple warning opportunities—stall horn and ESP events—before the final loss of control. The goal for listeners is not to judge the pilots. It's to build habits that make this chain harder to start, easier to detect, and easy to abandon early. When the airplane is telling you it's running out of margin, believe it—then reset the approach while you still have altitude to spare.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Well, today we're talking about the crash of November 17 Delta Tango, the Cirrus SR 22, that crashed near Shelbyville, Indiana, killing the newly minted private pilot and his CFI.

0:13.4

The NTSB probable cause was, quote, both pilots' failure to maintain adequate airspeed during departure from the airport, which led to the airplane exceeding its critical angle of attack,

0:24.2

entering an aerodynamic stall, and impacting terrain.

0:28.2

While this tells us what happened, it doesn't tell us how and why they got into that situation.

0:33.6

But in a rare move, the NTSB published the data that the aircraft captured itself.

0:39.3

And by merging that data with ADSB data, I was able to create a video that shows exactly

0:44.5

what happened.

0:45.7

And in my opinion, the pilots were doing a training maneuver, an emergency approach and landing

0:50.5

to a cornfield that went horribly wrong.

0:53.5

And Rob Mark and I will tell you why. Also today, I'll be playing an audio clip of something I heard over the radio, and I'll be reading a couple of your emails. Hello again and welcome to Aviation News Talk, where we're talking general aviation. My name is Max Frescott. I've been flying for 50 years. I'm the author of several books in the 2008 National Flight Instructor of the Year. And my mission is to help you become the safest possible pilot. Last week at episode

1:16.4

411, we talked with Rob Mark about a vision jet nose gear collapses at it that the NTSB

1:22.0

says was likely caused by the pilot raising the landing gear. So if you didn't hear that episode,

1:27.2

you may want to check it out at AviationNewstalk.com slash 411. So if you're new to this show, welcome. Glad you found us. And if you would, take a moment to touch either the subscribe key or if you're using Spotify or the Apple podcast app, the follow key, so that next week's episode is downloaded for free. And just a quick reminder that whenever you buy a new lightspeed headset, Lightspeed will send a check to support Aviation News Talk, but only if you first go to this special link we've set up for you to get to their website. And that link is AviationNewstalk.com slash Lightspeed. And if you've been listening to the show for a while and feel

2:01.0

that you're getting value from it, why not make a donation? Think perhaps about what you might

2:05.3

pay an instructor for an hour or two of good instruction. And then support the show by going to

2:10.5

AviationNewsstalk.com slash support. Coming up on the news for the week of January 26,

2:16.0

2026, and TSB releases preliminary report on the Greg Biffle citation crash in North Carolina.

2:22.9

The Reagan National Midder Collision Pubble Cause was announced, and we have a follow-up to our bad boys file.

2:29.7

All this and more than the news starts now.

2:36.0

From Aveweb.com, Greg Biffle crash followed instrument failure and cockpit confusion.

2:42.6

Greg Biffel's Cessna Citation 550 encountered multiple instrument failures and communication

2:47.3

issues before crashing near the runway at Statesville Regional Airport in North Carolina in December,

...

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