Gentlemen,
In a view from the back, it looks like the entire elevator is gone before impact which was certainly caused by flutter. A good friend of mine, Joe Frasca whose father own's Frasca Flight Systems, lost the entire wing of his aerobatic monoplane to flutter and he died trying to bail out. When an aircraft surface goes into flutter, it explodes off the plane violently. After building my Glasair III, doing the flutter testing was nerve wracking. At 320 MPH the right gear door went into flutter and exploded off the plane. It felt like a bomb went off under my butt and sent my blood pressure off the chart. No Glasair had ever been taken above 350 MPH and I took mine to 375 indicated after redesigning and beefing up both gear doors. Any change to a control surface that changes how it will vibrate (including a weight change) may cause flutter that would not have occurred in that parts original state. The loss of the trim tab on the elevator of that highly modified P-51 was the starting point for loosing the entire elevator. The plane would have flown fine if all it lost was that trim tab. Without the elevator, the pilot was doomed with no way to pull up and no time to bail out.
Chip
In a view from the back, it looks like the entire elevator is gone before impact which was certainly caused by flutter. A good friend of mine, Joe Frasca whose father own's Frasca Flight Systems, lost the entire wing of his aerobatic monoplane to flutter and he died trying to bail out. When an aircraft surface goes into flutter, it explodes off the plane violently. After building my Glasair III, doing the flutter testing was nerve wracking. At 320 MPH the right gear door went into flutter and exploded off the plane. It felt like a bomb went off under my butt and sent my blood pressure off the chart. No Glasair had ever been taken above 350 MPH and I took mine to 375 indicated after redesigning and beefing up both gear doors. Any change to a control surface that changes how it will vibrate (including a weight change) may cause flutter that would not have occurred in that parts original state. The loss of the trim tab on the elevator of that highly modified P-51 was the starting point for loosing the entire elevator. The plane would have flown fine if all it lost was that trim tab. Without the elevator, the pilot was doomed with no way to pull up and no time to bail out.
Chip