Accident | |
---|---|
Date | 28 June 1982 |
Summary | Jackscrew failure due to metal fatigue; design flaw |
Site | Near Mazyr, Byelorussian SSR, Soviet Union 52°0′N 29°13′E / 52.000°N 29.217°E |
Aircraft | |
Aircraft type | Yakovlev Yak-42 |
Operator | Aeroflot |
Registration | СССР-42529 |
Flight origin | Pulkovo Airport, Leningrad, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union |
Destination | Kiev (now Kyiv)-Zhuliany International Airport, Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union |
Occupants | 132 |
Passengers | 124 |
Crew | 8 |
Fatalities | 132 |
Survivors | 0 |
Aeroflot Flight 8641 was a Yakovlev Yak-42 airliner on a domestic scheduled passenger flight from Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) to Kiev (now Kyiv). On 28 June 1982, the flight crashed south of Mazyr, Byelorussian SSR, killing all 132 people on board. The accident was both the first and deadliest crash of a Yakovlev Yak-42, and remains the deadliest aviation accident in Belarus.[1][2]
The cause was a failure of the jackscrew controlling the horizontal stabilizer due to a design flaw.
Aircraft and crew
The Yakovlev Yak-42 involved in the accident was registered to Aeroflot as СССР-42529 (manufacturer number 11040104, series number 04-01). The aircraft made its maiden flight on 21 April 1981 and was delivered to Ministry of Civil Aviation on 1 June 1981. At the time of the accident, it had 795 flight hours and 496 takeoff and landing cycles.[3]
All 124 passenger seats were filled, 11 by children. The cockpit crew consisted of:[3][4]
- Captain Vyacheslav Nikolaevich Musinsky
- Co-pilot Alexandr Sergeevich Stigarev
- Navigator-trainee Viktor Ivanovich Kedrov
- Flight engineer Nikolai Semenovich Vinogradov
Sequence of events
The aircraft took off from Pulkovo Airport at 9:01 Moscow time, having been delayed one minute because of a late passenger. At 10:45 it entered the zone of Kiev/Boryspil air traffic control Center. The crew started the landing checklist at 10:48:01. At 10:48:58 the crew informed the air traffic controller they reached the planned top of descent point, the controller clearing them for descent to FL255 (approximately 25,500 feet (7,800 m)). The crew confirmed the flight path; no further communications were heard from Flight 8641.
At 10:51:20 the autopilot gradually brought about a horizontal stabilizer angle of up 0.3° for descent for landing. At 10:51:30 the stabilizer angle sharply increased, exceeding the 2° limit within half a second. The sudden change resulted in a negative g-force of -1.5 g, but the autopilot adjusted the controls to lower it to -0.6 g. As the stabilizer did not respond to commands and the plane went on diving, the autopilot switched off after 3 seconds. The pilots pulled back on the yoke trying to level out the plane, but it continued into a steep dive; soon it rolled 35° left and the dive achieved 50°. As it rolled counterclockwise with over -2 g of overload, the aircraft disintegrated at 10:51:50 at the altitude of 5,700 metres (18,700 ft) and the instrument speed of 810 kilometres per hour (440 kn; 500 mph).[5]
The wreckage was found on the outskirts of Verbavychi village, 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) southeast of the district center Naroulia (itself being further 18 km south/west of the larger Mozyr which is often listed.) Fragments of the plane were scattered across an area of 6.5 by 3.5 kilometres (4.0 by 2.2 mi). All 132 people on board perished.[5]
Cause
The cause was determined to be a failure of the jackscrew mechanism in the aircraft's tail due to metal fatigue, which resulted from flaws in the Yak-42's design. The investigation concluded that among the causes of the crash were poor maintenance, as well as the control system of the stabilizer not meeting basic aviation standards. Three engineers who signed the jackscrew drawings were convicted.
As for the official cause of the crash: "the spontaneous movement of the stabilizer was due to disconnection in flight of the jackscrew assembly due to the almost complete deterioration of the 42M5180-42 thread-nuts due to structural imperfections in the mechanism." Due to the accident, all Yak-42s were withdrawn from service until the design defect was rectified in October 1984.[1][5][6]
See also
- Alaska Airlines Flight 261 – a MD-83 accident in 2000 also resulting from a jackscrew failure
- American Airlines Flight 96 and Turkish Airlines Flight 981 - similar accidents involving in-flight structural failure due to design flaws, in which the latter contributed to the respective type grounding
References
- 1 2 "ASN Aircraft accident Yakovlev 42 СССР-42529 Mozyr". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 2017-12-29.
- ↑ "УПАВШИЕ С НЕБА. Архив БГ. №29 (345) 29 июля 2002 г. БелГазета. Новости Беларуси. Белорусские новости" [FALLEN FROM THE SKY. BG archive. No. 29 (345) July 29, 2002 BelGazeta. News of Belarus. Belarusian news]. www.belgazeta.by (in Russian). Retrieved 2017-01-11.
- 1 2 "Яковлев Як-42 Бортовой №: СССР-42529" [Yakovlev Yak-42 Bortovoy No.: USSR-42529]. russianplanes.net (in Russian). Retrieved 2017-12-29.
- ↑ Documentary detective (2014-09-15). "Документальный детекти полёт..." [Documentary detective flight...]. YouTube (in Russian). Retrieved 2017-01-11.
- 1 2 3 "Катастрофа Як-42 Ленинградского УГА близ Наровли, Белоруссия" [Accident of the Yak-42 of the Leningrad UGA near Narovlya, Belarus]. www.airdisaster.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2017-01-11.
- ↑ Gordon, Komissarov and Komissarov 2005, p. 315.