NTSB CAROL · Event
Event CEN25LA298
Registry · N102SH
FAA Aircraft Registry record.
Make / Model
BELL 47G-4A
Year of manufacture
1971 · 54 years old at event
TCDS
2H3 · SCOTT'S-BELL 47 INC
Engine
ALLISON 250 SER 250HP (250 hp)
Seats / Engines
3 seats · 1 engine
Last airworthiness date
20030627
ADS-B equipped
Yes — Mode-S A00DBA
Registrant of record
SCOTTS HELICOPTER SERVICES INC
Source: FAA Aircraft Registry (releasable master file).
Aircraft involved
Probable cause & findings
A total loss of engine power due to fuel starvation, which resulted from attitude-inducing unporting of the fuel.
Factual narrative
The aerial application helicopter had completed applying liquid chemical to a corn field and the hopper was empty. The pilot was flying the helicopter back to the loading truck at approximately 100 ft agl and 60 mph when a total loss of engine power occurred. The pilot performed an autorotation to a flat alfalfa field, the helicopter landed hard, the right side skid collapsed, and the helicopter came to rest upright. During the hard landing, the main rotor blades severed the tail boom. The pilot was able to egress from the helicopter without further incident. After the accident, about 5 total gallons of Jet A fuel were found in the two saddle-type fuel tanks, that are located above the turboshaft engine. There was no fuel leak due to the accident sequence. The pilot reported the helicopter was last fueled about 1 hour and 35 minutes before the accident occurred and about 30 gallons of fuel was added. For the most recent takeoff prior to the accident, the pilot reported that the cockpit fuel gauge was indicating between 8 to 18 gallons of fuel onboard. The helicopter sustained substantial damage to the main rotor system, the tail boom, and the tail rotor system. The pilot reported there were no preimpact mechanical malfunctions or failures with the airframe or the engine that would have precluded normal operation. The make and model of helicopter has a fuel capacity of 61.6 gallons of which 57.5 gallons of fuel is useable, and 4.1 gallons of fuel are unusable. The fuel delivery port or tube on both saddle-type fuel tanks is located at the aft, lower end of each fuel tank, and both fuel tanks deliver fuel to the engine simultaneously. There is no pilot-controlled fuel selector valve located in the cockpit. A pitch attitude change such as a banking turn or a nose-down attitude, would likely cause a disruption in fuel flow to the engine with the low fuel levels that were found in the fuel tanks, resulting in fuel starvation. Source: NTSB Aviation Accident Database Retrieved: 2026-02-12
NTSB Findings
Hierarchical cause / factor breakdown from the FAA bulk avdata database. Each finding tagged C (Cause) or F (Factor).
- — Aircraft-Fluids/misc hardware-Fluids-Fuel-Fluid level
- — Aircraft-Aircraft systems-Fuel system-Fuel distribution-Design
- — Aircraft-Aircraft systems-Fuel system-Fuel distribution-Capability exceeded
Verbatim from NTSB's published report. Source file
NTSB_2025_CEN25LA298.txt.
Findings + structured fields enriched from FAA avall.mdb.
Full investigation docket on
data.ntsb.gov ↗.
Beyond the agency record
Search this event elsewhere.
Pre-filled searches into the sources where news + community discussion of aviation events lives. External sources are reported, not agency. Treat them as signal that something happened, not as fact about what happened.
Entity-clustered aviation events in the press — last 24 hr + 30-day archive.
Official agency record + docket.
Investigative docket: factual reports, photos, transcripts.
Long-running aviation incident database (Flight Safety Foundation).
Community NTSB synthesis blog — often has photos and witness reports.
Gold-standard aviation incident blog.
Aviation industry news search.
GA pilot forum — informed but rumor-prone.
GA pilot subreddit search.
Tail-number page — flight history (free tier limited).
AOPA Air Safety Institute search.
Mainstream press coverage. Recent events only.
Privacy-preserving news search.
External links open in a new tab. We don't ingest their content; we deep-link search queries.
Related research
What the literature says.
Academic papers and agency reports matching this event's aircraft type or causal vocabulary (fuel starvation). Sourced from NASA NTRS, NTSB Safety Studies, FAA CAMI, AOPA Air Safety Institute, Embry-Riddle Scholarly Commons, arXiv, and the Semantic Scholar academic graph.
Browse the full corpus — academia portal ↗