Searchers found the plane the following afternoon, Sunday, October 2, in an unpopulated section of the
Mount Hood National Forest, approximately west-southwest of
Mount Hood. The wreckage was located on the eastern slope of a ridge in the
Salmon Mountain Complex at an
elevation of . The aircraft attitude was 30 degrees right bank, in a 3-4 degree climbing flightpath on a heading of 265 degrees at impact. After shearing numerous large fir trees, it struck the 30-35 degree upslope and slid uphill approximately . The main wreckage came to rest at , and a severe ground fire occurred. All of the extremities of the aircraft were accounted for, its landing gear was retracted, and no evidence of in-flight structural failure, fire, or explosion was found. The aircraft was equipped with a flight data recorder and a cockpit voice recorder. Although both were recovered from the wreckage, only the
flight data recorder provided a usable record. William L. Lamb of the
Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) was in charge of the investigation. ==Aircraft information==