News

The pilot of a twin-engine Cessna that plunged into the ocean off Sunset Cliffs last month, killing all six aboard, had “expressed some nervousness about the busy Southern California airspace” and ...
The crash was reported at 12:30 p.m. on June 8. All six people on board the aircraft — the pilot and five passengers — were presumed dead by authorities. The NTSB’s report, released Tuesday, ...
A Cessna 414 crashed in Colonia, New Jersey, at 11 a.m., the FAA said. Local officials report that the house is on fire. The plane was on the way from Newport, Virginia to Linden, New Jersey.
A Cessna 414 [Credit: FLYING Magazine] Federal authorities are looking more closely at the wreckage and communications data surrounding the February 3, ...
This 1975 Cessna 414 Chancellor Is a High-Flying, Cabin-Class ‘AircraftForSale’ Top Pick The roomy, pressurized twin makes an ideal mount for long-distance business and family travel.
A Cessna 414 crashed. A twin-engine Cessna 414 crashed into a home at 84 Berkeley Avenue around 11 a.m., according to the Federal Aviation Administration.
A design that dates back to the 1960s, the Cessna 414 first flew in 1968 and an improved model was introduced from 1978 as the 414A. More than 1,000 were built between 1968 and 1985.
A preliminary report shows what led up to a plane crash that left six people dead on a flight to Phoenix last month.On June 8 around 12:30 p.m., a twin-engine Cessna 414 crashed roughly three miles ...
The plane was a Cessna 414, the Federal Aviation Administration said. Local officials then reported that the house was on fire. The plane was on the way from Leesburg, Virginia, ...
The aircraft, identified as a Cessna 414, was reported down shortly before 1 p.m., according to San Diego Fire Rescue and the U.S. Coast Guard. Watch NBC 4 free wherever you are.
Canadian investigators have pointed to fuel starvation after a Cessna 414 was forced to land in a field while en route to a test-pilot training institution. The aircraft (C-FIYQ) had been newly ...
The U.S. Coast Guard searched for the twin-engine Cessna 414, tail number N414BA, which crashed about 3 miles west of Point Loma, an oceanside community in San Diego.