China Airlines Flight 611
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Summary | |
---|---|
Date | 25 May 2002 |
Type | In-flight metal fatigue failure |
Site | Taiwan Strait |
Fatalities | 225 |
Injuries | 0 |
Aircraft | |
Aircraft type | Boeing 747-209B |
Operator | China Airlines |
Tail number | B-18255 |
Passengers | 206 |
Crew | 19 |
Survivors | 0 |
China Airlines Flight 611 (CAL611, CI611) was a regularly scheduled flight from Chiang Kai Shek International Airport (now called Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport) in Taoyuan to Hong Kong International Airport in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China. The flight crashed, killing all aboard on May 25, 2002.
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[edit] Flight and disaster
On May 25, the flight took off at 2:50 p.m. local time for the 1 hour 20 minutes flight to Hong Kong.
About 20 minutes after takeoff, the aircraft disappeared from radar screens, suggesting the aircraft had experienced an in flight breakup at FL350, near the Penghu Islands at Taiwan Strait. Later that day, the flight was confirmed to be one of the most mysterious aviation disasters in history.All 19 crew members and 206 passengers were killed. 190 of the deceased were from Taiwan, 14 from Hong Kong, 1 Singaporean, 9 from Mainland China, and 1 Swede. 3 were infants. 114 were in a group tour organized by five travel agencies to Hong Kong or the Mainland. The plane was expected to arrive at 4:28 p.m.
[edit] Search, recovery and investigation
At 5:05 p.m., a military C130 aircraft spotted a crashed airliner 20 nautical miles (37 km) northeast of Makung. Oil slicks were also spotted at 5:05 p.m.. The first body was found at 6:10 p.m..
Searchers recovered 162 bodies and 15 % of the wreckage, including part of the cockpit, and found no signs of burns, explosives or gunshots.
There was no distress signal or communication sent out prior to the crash. Radar data suggests that the aircraft broke into four pieces while at FL350. This theory is supported by the fact that articles which would have been found inside the aircraft (magazines, etc.) were found up to 80 miles (129 km) from the crash site. The weather and climate were normal. The CVR showed that the pilot did not detect any anomaly and was humming the famous oldie tune "When Will You Be Back?" by Teresa Teng.
The flight data recorder from Flight 611 shows that the plane began gaining altitude at a significantly faster rate in the 27 seconds before the plane broke apart, although the extra gain in altitude was well within the plane's design limits. The plane was supposed to be leveling off then as it approached its cruising altitude of 35,000 feet. Shortly before the breakup, one of the aircraft's four engines began providing slightly less thrust. By coincidence, the same engine is the only one that has been recovered so far from the sea floor.
[edit] Metal fatigue
The final investigation report found that the accident was the result of metal fatigue due to inadequate maintenance after a previous incident. The report finds that on February 7, 1980, the accident aircraft suffered a tailstrike occurrence in Hong Kong. The aircraft was then ferried back to Taiwan on the same day un-pressurized and a temporary repair was conducted the day after. A permanent repair was conducted on May 23 through 26, 1980. However, the permanent repair of the tail strike was not accomplished in accordance with the Boeing SRM, in that the area of damaged skin in Section 46 was not removed (trimmed) and the repair doubler did not extend sufficiently beyond the entire damaged area to restore the structural strength. Consequently, after repeating cycles of depressurization and pressurization during flights, the weakened hull started to crack gradually and finally broke open in flight on that flight, exactly 22 years after the faulty repair had been applied to the damaged tail. An explosive decompression of the aircraft occurred once the crack was broken, causing the complete disintegration of the aircraft mid-air.
This accident is deemed similar to the Japan Airlines Flight 123 accident in Tokyo on August 12, 1985, which also involved a Boeing 747-SR aircraft with faulty repair work done after a tail strike many years before the final demise of the aircraft. Its tail section and the hydraulical control ability was blown off by the pressure of the cabin and, subsequently the airliner became uncontrollable in mid-air around 24,000 feet. This Japan Airlines accident remains now as the most serious single aircraft accident in aviation history, with 505 passengers and 15 crew killed.
Many family members of victims blamed the maintenance irregularities on the supposed "profit first, last, and only" corporate philosophy of the airline. China Airlines denied these charges.
[edit] Flight number
Flight 611 no longer exists. Shortly after the accident, China Airlines changed the flight number to 619, which now serves the Taipei - Hong Kong route along with existing flights 601, 603, 605, 607, 609, 613, 615, 617, and 803.
[edit] The Aircraft
The aircraft B-18255, MSN 21843, involved was the only Boeing 747-200 passenger aircraft left in China Airlines fleet at the time. It was delivered to the airline in 1979 and had logged 64,810 hours of flight time. The aircraft was in fact already sold to Orient Thai Airlines by China Airlines for US$1.45 million. The accident flight was the penultimate flight to have been operated by the aircraft for China Airlines. It was scheduled to be delivered to Orient Thai Airlines after its planned last flight, the return flight from Hong Kong to Taipei. The contract to sell the aircraft was void after the crash.
The remaining 4 747-200 freighters in China Airlines fleet were grounded immediately by Taiwan's CAA after the crash. They were allowed to return to service a few days later after maintenance checks.
[edit] Trivia
- May 25 - the date of CA611's crash - was also the date of the crash of American Airlines Flight 191, the United States's worst aviation accident.