The name of one of the victims has been released. I agree Anthony, it's a tradgedy and my thoughts are with the families.
www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3886976a10,00.html
Fiery plane crash kills two
03 December 2006
By LOIS WATSON
A Mid-Canterbury man who adored vintage cars and planes died in his Tiger Moth yesterday.
John Copland of Ashburton and his passenger died when his recently restored deHavilland DH82A Tiger Moth crashed just metres from houses north of the town.
An hour later, five people in a light plane were forced to make an emergency landing in Hawke's Bay after their double-engine plane failed. A flight instructor and four students escaped without injury.
In Ashburton, semi-retired farmer Ray Gudex was working in a paddock on his Mitchum Rd farm north of Ashburton with his son Boyd when he saw the Tiger Moth approaching.
"It was spiralling and then it just went into this vertical descent," Gudex said. The plane nose-dived into the ground about 30m from his house where his wife was in the kitchen.
"All she could see were flames - it was pretty upsetting."
Gudex and his son raced to the plane to help the pilot, but by the time they got to the wreckage it was engulfed in flames.
"We couldn't do anything. We couldn't even see if there were people in it."
It appeared the plane had taken off from the nearby airfield only minutes before. Conditions for flying were excellent.
Police had not released the identity of those on board, but the Sunday Star-Times understands the pilot was Copland, who owned the plane with his father, Ray.
It is believed the Tiger Moth was one of the newest rebuilds in the country. The Coplands had owned it less than a year.
Members of the Mid-Canterbury Aero Club and Aviation Museum, where Copland was a member, said he had been flying for a couple of years. He lived with his father and was self-employed.
Pat Copland, John's aunt, said the family was deeply shocked.
Another relative said John Copland lived for "anything mechanical" and was very close to his dad, Ray, who was in his 70s.
Previous news stories mention that the pair kept vintage tractors, machinery, motorbikes, cars, and a grader on their hobby farm just outside the town.
The Tiger Moth crashed shortly before 11am, about 500m from busy SH1 - the main route through the South Island.
Ashburton fire chief Alan Burgess said several fire crews responded to the Gudex family's emergency call, but there was little they could do. A fierce fire engulfed the plane's engine bay.
Two bodies were removed from the wreckage shortly before 5pm. Police and the Civil Aviation Authority are investigating.
Meanwhile, the four student pilots on the plane forced to make an emergency landing in Hawke's Bay yesterday were unaware they were in danger.
Their six-seater Partnavia plane suffered a double engine failure, forcing their instructor to make an emergency landing in a small field about midday.
Instructor Ravindrah Singh said the students thought they were being tested on emergency procedures until the plane hit the ground.
"That's the time they realised it was the real thing."
The private students from the Manawatu Aero Club were returning to Palmerston North from Napier when their first engine failed about 760m above Takapau.
While running through emergency procedures, the second engine failed and Singh took over the controls to make the landing.
Singh said the students were in good spirits and the incident had been good for their emergency training.
Additional reporting by Emma Page