I like this one so I thought I'd throw it out here in case anyone fancies a natter on the subject...
I'm asked all the time what caused the accident and I have to answer honestly that I can't say, it's just too big a subject. Firstly, there's the things we are yet to learn about. We know the boat had fueling problems and with her original fuel system being rebuilt to running order we may yet learn something crucial. Likewise with the electrical system. We know she suffered severe wiring damage and this may have been caused in the instant after the crash as her cockpit wiring was severed and shorted or, more sinisterly, by the addition of a second LP boost pump haphazardly wired into the loom that had to work harder and harder as the run progressed. These questions we may very well answer in the fullness of time.
Then there's the stuff that lies beyond dispute but as yet has not properly analysed. It's long been known that the forward engine mount failed sometime before the initial impact but how long before and what effect this would have had (if any) has not been scientifically explored yet. The boat also had a significant weight bias to the left (look at how she wallows after the crash) due to the placement of ancillary equipment when she was re-engined in 66, and the design of her fuel and hydraulic systems and placement of fluids within them only made matters worse.
Then there's all the speculative stuff like did Donald simply go too fast? But even that is an imprecise science where the aerodynamicists and hydrodynamicists seldom agree because it all takes place at the interface between two fluids and there's no hard and fast rules down there.
This is one of those things we could debate until the end of time so if anyone wants to pitch in feel free...
