I’m researching a crash of King Air as it approached a small airport (Eveleth, MN), there were no survivors or black boxes. The plane crashed a few minutes after its last radio communication with the control tower (Duluth), there was no distress call. It was also reported that one of the pilots “clicked on†the runway lights by keying the mike switch twice.
I know very little about aviation so please bear with what might seem like obvious questions and don’t presume I understand any terminology I don’t use.
1) Is it normal to turn on the runway lights for a daytime landing with decent visibility (4 -5 miles below the 700ft agl cloud cover)?
2) At what stage in a flight would a pilot normally turn the lights on, before of after spotting the runway? Might a pilot turn on the lights if they were having difficulty locating the airport (the pilot had only flown to that airport 3 or 4 times, there were problems with the VOR and the plane was about 7 degrees off track).
3) I assume that in order to “click on†the runway lights at Eveleth Airport one of the pilots would have to have switched the radio which had previously been set for the Duluth tower to Eveleth’s frequency, is that correct?
Thanks in advance,
Len
I know very little about aviation so please bear with what might seem like obvious questions and don’t presume I understand any terminology I don’t use.
1) Is it normal to turn on the runway lights for a daytime landing with decent visibility (4 -5 miles below the 700ft agl cloud cover)?
2) At what stage in a flight would a pilot normally turn the lights on, before of after spotting the runway? Might a pilot turn on the lights if they were having difficulty locating the airport (the pilot had only flown to that airport 3 or 4 times, there were problems with the VOR and the plane was about 7 degrees off track).
3) I assume that in order to “click on†the runway lights at Eveleth Airport one of the pilots would have to have switched the radio which had previously been set for the Duluth tower to Eveleth’s frequency, is that correct?
Thanks in advance,
Len