FLT CREW OF HAWKER 400XP ENCOUNTER BRIEF BURST OF TURB CAUSING THEM TO LOSE 300 FT FROM ASSIGNED ALT.

Date: 2004-05 · Aircraft: HS 125 Series 600 · Phase: descent

Anomalies: deviation-altitude-excursion-from-assigned-altitude|deviation-discrepancy-procedural-clearance|inflight-event-encounter-loss-of-aircraft-control|inflight-event-encounter-weather-turbulence

Synopsis

FLT CREW OF HAWKER 400XP ENCOUNTER BRIEF BURST OF TURB CAUSING THEM TO LOSE 300 FT FROM ASSIGNED ALT.

Narrative

WHILE DEVIATING N OFF COURSE IN CLOUD TO AVOID TSTMS ON DSCNT FROM ICT TO RDU WE ENCOUNTERED A SUDDEN; UNEXPECTED; ISOLATED SHORT BURST OF TURB; WHICH RENDERED THE AUTOPLT AND US INCAPABLE OF MAINTAINING OUR ASSIGNED ALT. THIS TURB LASTED APPROX 5 SECONDS IN DURATION AND WAS ALSO ACCOMPANIED BY A SHORT BURST OF FROZEN PRECIPITATION. AN ALT EXCURSION OF APPROX 300 FT LOWER OCCURRED. WE IMMEDIATELY CORRECTED BY CLBING BACK TO THE ASSIGNED ALT. IN SPITE OF THE SUGGESTION BY THE PF TO ANNOUNCE OUR SIT TO THE CTLR; BECAUSE OF VERY DENSE RADIO TFC I BELIEVED IT WAS BEST TO GUARD RADIO SILENCE AND DID SO. WE HAD CLBED BACK TO OUR ASSIGNED ALT IN SEVERAL SECONDS WHEN THE CTLR ASKED US IF WE WERE AT OUR ASSIGNED ALT TO WHICH I REPLIED 'YES WE ARE.' BY THAT TIME WE WERE AGAIN AT OUR ASSIGNED ALT; SO NOTHING MORE WAS SAID. DUE TO THE ISOLATED; SUDDEN AND VIOLENT NATURE OF THE BURST OF TURB; IT IS DIFFICULT TO IDENT MEASURES THAT MAY BE TAKEN TO PREVENT A RECURRENCE. DISTANCE FROM CONVECTIVE ACTIVITY SHOWN ON RADAR SEEMED TO US TO HAVE BEEN APPROPRIATE. IN RETROSPECT; PERHAPS A HIGHER DEGREE OF ANTICIPATION FOR UNEXPECTED TURB MAY HAVE PREPARED US TO RECOVER SOONER FROM THE EFFECTS OF THE TURB. AN IMMEDIATE ANNOUNCEMENT TO ATC OF OUR SIT REGARDLESS OF RADIO TFC DENSITY WOULD HAVE BEEN APPROPRIATE AND I SHOULD HAVE DONE SO TO ALERT OTHER TFC IN THE AREA OF THE POTENTIAL FOR PROBS RESULTING FROM UNEXPECTED TURB AND ICING POTENTIAL.

Source: NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System (public domain). Reports are voluntary submissions and are not verified by NASA.