Urgent recommendation calls for inspection of Canadian-made De Havilland Otter planes
VANCOUVER — Aviation regulators in Canada and the United States are being urged to order the immediate inspection of a type of Canadian-built float plane involved in a deadly crash in Washington state.
The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board issued an urgent safety recommendation Thursday, calling on Transport Canada and the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration to require immediate inspections of De Havilland Canada DHC-3 airplanes, better known as the DHC-3 Otter.
The recommendation says a crucial part of the Otter’s horizontal tail stabilizer appears to have come apart on the Friday Harbor Seaplanes aircraft that crashed into Puget Sound north of Seattle in September, killing all 10 aboard.
The regulator says the part might have failed because a clamp nut that attaches two sections may have unscrewed and the lock ring that would have prevented the separation was either missing or improperly installed.