NTSB News Talk – Aviation Accidents, Safety Investigations & Pilot Lessons

Max Trescott | Aviation News Talk Network

NTSB News Talk is your go-to podcast for in-depth discussions of aircraft accidents, investigations, and the lessons pilots can’t afford to ignore. Hosted by award-winning aviation journalist Rob Mark and Max Trescott, a flight instructor who has trained as an accident investigator, this show breaks down recent NTSB reports, analyzes accident causes, and explores what every pilot, instructor, and aviation enthusiast can learn from these events. Whether you’re a student pilot, airline captain, or simply fascinated by aviation safety, NTSB News Talk brings you facts, context, and expert commentary—without sensationalism. Rob and Max balance serious safety insights with engaging conversation, making complex investigations accessible and informative. Each episode features real-world scenarios, industry trends, and sometimes, interviews with investigators, subject-matter experts, or those impacted by aviation incidents. Tune in to stay informed, sharpen your safety mindset, and better understand how aviation continues to evolve through hard-won lessons in the skies. Subscribe now and never miss a crash course in aviation safety.

  1. Reagan National (DCA) Midair Collision Probable Cause + Greg Biffle Citation 550 Preliminary Report

    FEB 10

    Reagan National (DCA) Midair Collision Probable Cause + Greg Biffle Citation 550 Preliminary Report

    Max talks with co-host Rob Mark about two headline-making NTSB threads: the DCA midair collision and the preliminary report on the Greg Biffle crash. First, they react to the NTSB’s day-long public hearing on the DCA midair and the board’s newly adopted probable-cause statement—an unusually long, multi-factor finding that points toward fixes in airspace design, controller procedures, ADS-B policy, and military aviation governance. Then they pivot to the Cessna Citation 550 accident involving NASCAR driver Greg Biffle (N257BW) near Statesville, North Carolina. The preliminary report raises hard questions about cockpit workload and decision-making: instrument anomalies, an apparent electrical/power issue, and a “second in command required” limitation that wasn’t satisfied by the right-seat occupant. The episode also rounds up several other investigations: a Cirrus SR20 CAPS deployment in England where the parachute lines may have separated after snagging power lines, a Cirrus SR22 engine-failure diversion in South Carolina, an IFR Bonanza crash in rain near Sabine, Texas, a Mexican Navy King Air 350i accident near Galveston, and final reports covering a training stall/spin in Georgia and a Musketeer engine failure after an undetected oil-system leak. If you care about real-world lessons—and what the NTSB is signaling for the next wave of safety changes—hit play and share it with another pilot. Support Support the work that Rob and Max do creating the NTSB News Talk podcast by making a monthly donation via Patreon.

    54 min
  2. Hawker Stall-Test Crashes: Urgent NTSB Action + NOTAM Slackline Tragedy

    JAN 12

    Hawker Stall-Test Crashes: Urgent NTSB Action + NOTAM Slackline Tragedy

    Max Trescott and Rob Mark connect a string of very different accidents with one shared theme: safety margin usually disappears one “reasonable” choice at a time—until the airplane (or the environment) collects the debt. They open with a major development: the NTSB’s urgent recommendation to Textron after two fatal post-maintenance stall test flights in Hawker business jets. Max and Rob explain why stall testing in swept-wing jets can be uniquely unforgiving, and why “unacceptable stall characteristics” should make every pilot sit up straight. The takeaway: if a flight requires test-pilot skills, then “maintenance requires it” doesn’t make it safe—it demands the right training, the right crew, and the right conditions. Max then shares NTSB news: a public board meeting on Tuesday, January 27, 2026 at 9:00 a.m. ET to determine probable cause for the January 29, 2025 midair collision over the Potomac River near Reagan National (PSA CRJ700 and an Army UH-60L Black Hawk). Max and Rob will be watching closely and will share clips in a future episode. From there they break down recent accidents and reports, including: the Dassault Falcon 50, 9H-DFS, crash near Haymana, Turkey; an MD530F helicopter, N3502P, near Superior, Arizona where a slackline/highline may have been a factor; a TBM 700, N700PT, near Monroe, Wisconsin involving an approach continued below minimums; the Hawker 900XP, N900VA, fatal post-maintenance stall test crash; a Cessna P210, N1400, fuel exhaustion accident in San Diego in IMC with low recent flying; and a Bonanza G36, N360FV, near Tracy, California that illustrates the engine-emergency dilemma: choose the ugly, certain option—or gamble for the “better” airport you might not reach.

    53 min
  3. Garmin Autoland Emergency Landing: First King Air Save (Max Heard It Live)

    12/26/2025

    Garmin Autoland Emergency Landing: First King Air Save (Max Heard It Live)

    Episode 20 of NTSB News Talk opens with an aviation milestone: the first confirmed in-service, real-world use of Garmin’s Autoland. A King Air B200, tail number N479BR, squawked 7700 and ultimately landed itself at Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport (KBJC) in Broomfield, Colorado on Saturday, December 20, 2025. Garmin later confirmed the activation, and ATC audio captured the synthetic callouts declaring “pilot incapacitation” and the system’s intention to land. Max adds the kind of detail that makes this story feel real: he was flying in Colorado that day, monitoring Guard, and heard the automated messages as they occurred. He also heard a voice transmit on Guard mentioning a depressurization and describing difficulty changing frequencies—consistent with the way Autoland takes control of communications once activated. In their discussion, the flight track shows the airplane climbing out of Aspen into the low-20s, then descending, leveling, and later maneuvering near the destination before landing—exactly the kind of structured “get down, get safe, get on the ground” profile Autoland is designed to execute. Aviation outlets reported the emergency was tied to a pressurization issue and the engagement of emergency descent logic. Aviation International News+1 After a quick note that Episode 19 was cited in a New York Post story by Emily Crane, the episode pivots into four NTSB reports that all share one theme: the accidents are “simple” only if you ignore the physics. First is N850JH, a fatal TBM 850 crash near Ludington, Michigan. The NTSB concluded the pilot departed after pulling the airplane from an unheated hangar during active snowfall and taxiing out with visible snow contamination on the wings and horizontal stabilizer. Deice boots don’t solve that on the ground; contamination kills performance margins by reducing lift and increasing drag right when the airplane is most vulnerable—after rotation. The report narrative (and local coverage quoting it) describes a normal-looking departure that quickly turned into a wing drop, stall, and impact. Next is N7756N, a Cherokee accident at Frazier Lake Airport in Hollister, California (Sept. 10, 2025)—no injuries, but packed with lessons. The pilot came in high and fast, tried to salvage it with a slip, floated significantly, then initiated a late go-around. During the go-around attempt, the wheels touched down about two-thirds down the grass runway; with 40° flaps still selected, the airplane became airborne again, but the pilot saw about 45 knots and a mostly-on stall warning and then pulled power to idle to “abort” the go-around, leading to a hard landing, bounce, and impact with a dirt mound. The report also highlights a major contributing setup: landing runway 05 with wind 250 at 11—i.e., meaningful tailwind. Third is a fatal VFR-into-IMC CFIT involving N320P, a Lancair 320 near Manitowoc, Wisconsin. The flight track suggests an attempted approach, then a diversion, but conditions were night IMC with a 400-foot ceiling. The airplane remained on a VFR code (1200) with no recorded ATC contact, and investigators concluded the pilot flew in IMC without an IFR clearance and executed an unapproved instrument approach into trees and terrain. Then comes the gut punch: this wasn’t a low-time private pilot. Max and Rob note the pilot was a 57-year-old airline ATP/CFI with tens of thousands of hours. The point is brutal and useful: experience doesn’t rescue you from bad process and bad decisions. Finally, they cover a Pearland, Texas runway collision involving N127SL, a Cessna 182T and N5450L, a Grumman AA-5 after the AA-5 suffered a total electrical failure. The AA-5 pilot said the airplane had been “jumpstarted,” then lost comms and couldn’t extend flaps, followed the 182 to the runway, and rolled into it after it exited—without increasing spacing or going around. Max and Rob use this to teach a genuinely under-taught concept: alternators often need battery field current to self-excite, so a “dead battery + jumpstart” can still leave you with no charging system after takeoff. The NTSB final report for this event is explicit about the electrical failure and the pilot’s poor judgment that it required an expedited landing.

    45 min
  4. Citation 550 Crash in Statesville NC Kills NASCAR Driver Greg Biffle and Family

    12/18/2025

    Citation 550 Crash in Statesville NC Kills NASCAR Driver Greg Biffle and Family

    Max talks with Rob Mark about the fatal crash of a Citation 550 in Statesville, North Carolina, that killed six people, including a NASCAR driver Greg Biffle and members of his family. The accident occurred shortly after takeoff, making it one of the most closely watched aviation tragedies of the week and a focal point of this episode. Preliminary information indicates the Citation 550 departed Runway 10 at Statesville Airport and soon reported engine trouble. The crew attempted to return to land on Runway 28. ADS-B data shows the aircraft remained airborne for approximately seven minutes and came remarkably close to completing the return. The jet maneuvered back toward the airport, descended unusually low on downwind—likely to remain below cloud ceilings—and successfully aligned with the runway before crashing just short of the pavement following a rapid descent and post-impact fire. Weather conditions at the time were poor but not extreme, with drizzle, reduced visibility, and broken ceilings reported near the time of the accident. Max and Rob discuss how emergency returns immediately after takeoff create one of the highest workload scenarios pilots face, especially when compounded by weather, low altitude, and potential mechanical failures. While twin-engine aircraft are designed to continue flight after an engine problem, this accident highlights how quickly margins disappear when multiple stressors converge. The episode then places the Statesville crash within a broader context of recent fatal accidents involving business jets. Max and Rob examine a Citation III crash in Toluca, Mexico, that killed all ten people on board. Although weather at the time was VFR, the airport’s high elevation—approximately 8,500 feet—dramatically reduced aircraft performance. ADS-B data revealed excessive airspeed on short final, followed by an attempted go-around that showed no sustained climb. The hosts note that go-arounds at high density altitude are particularly unforgiving, and that many pilots underestimate how marginal climb performance can be when aircraft are heavy. Attention then turns to an unusually blunt public statement from NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy, who criticized proposed military exemptions to ADS-B requirements in Washington, D.C. airspace. Homendy warned that maintaining separate rules for military aircraft risks repeating history, referencing a fatal midair collision nearly a year earlier involving a military helicopter operating without ADS-B. Max and Rob discuss how exceptions intended for rare circumstances can become normalized, undermining the very safety systems designed to prevent collisions. Several additional accidents are reviewed, including a fatal Twin Comanche crash in Illinois and a night training flight in Louisiana that ended when a Cessna 172 crashed into Lake Pontchartrain. In the Louisiana accident, ADS-B data showed a gradual descent toward the airport, followed by a tight 180-degree turn and a sudden acceleration. In the final seconds, the aircraft’s descent rate increased dramatically, consistent with somatogravic illusion—a powerful and often deadly sensory illusion caused by acceleration in dark or instrument conditions. Max explains how somatogravic illusion can trick pilots into believing the aircraft is pitching up when it is not, prompting them to push forward on the controls. In visual conditions, outside references correct the error. At night or in IMC, the illusion can persist unchecked, leading to controlled flight into terrain. Max connects this accident to several historic crashes, emphasizing that the only reliable defense is strict reliance on instruments and verification of a positive rate of climb. The episode also covers a preliminary NTSB report involving a King Air B100 that crashed in Florida during a humanitarian relief flight. The aircraft carried significant cargo and fuel and entered clouds shortly after departure before descending at extreme speed. With no early signs of icing or engine failure, Max and Rob discuss possible pilot incapacitation and the risks associated with cargo loading and securing. Even relatively modest shifts in unsecured cargo can have catastrophic consequences in flight. Two final preliminary reports underscore recurring themes. In Ohio, a Jabiru Sport aircraft crashed after repeated low-altitude passes over a residence, consistent with hazardous low-level maneuvering. In California, a Cessna 172 struck rising terrain in a narrow mountain canyon after departing Bishop Airport, illustrating the dangers of mountain flying without sufficient altitude or specialized training. Throughout the episode, Max and Rob return to a central message: many of these accidents—despite their differing aircraft types and circumstances—share common threads of workload, human limitations, and decision-making under pressure. As winter approaches and daylight hours shorten, they urge pilots to exercise extra caution, particularly during night operations and high-stress departures. The fatal Citation 550 crash in Statesville serves as a sobering reminder that even well-equipped aircraft and experienced crews can be overwhelmed in minutes, and that understanding both aircraft performance and human physiology remains essential to aviation safety.

    38 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

NTSB News Talk is your go-to podcast for in-depth discussions of aircraft accidents, investigations, and the lessons pilots can’t afford to ignore. Hosted by award-winning aviation journalist Rob Mark and Max Trescott, a flight instructor who has trained as an accident investigator, this show breaks down recent NTSB reports, analyzes accident causes, and explores what every pilot, instructor, and aviation enthusiast can learn from these events. Whether you’re a student pilot, airline captain, or simply fascinated by aviation safety, NTSB News Talk brings you facts, context, and expert commentary—without sensationalism. Rob and Max balance serious safety insights with engaging conversation, making complex investigations accessible and informative. Each episode features real-world scenarios, industry trends, and sometimes, interviews with investigators, subject-matter experts, or those impacted by aviation incidents. Tune in to stay informed, sharpen your safety mindset, and better understand how aviation continues to evolve through hard-won lessons in the skies. Subscribe now and never miss a crash course in aviation safety.

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