Braathens Flight 239

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Braathens Flight 239
Summary
Date December 23, 1972
Type Controlled flight into terrain
Site Asker
Passengers 42
Crew 3
Injuries 5
Fatalities 40
Survivors 5
Aircraft type Fokker F-28 Fellowship
Aircraft name Sverre Sigurdsson
Operator Braathens S.A.F.E.
Tail number LN-SUY
Flight origin Ålesund Airport, Vigra
Destination Oslo Airport, Fornebu

Braathens Flight 239 was a flight between Ålesund Airport, Vigra and Oslo Airport, Fornebu airport which crashed in Asker on December 23, 1972 killing 40 people. It was the worst airline disaster involving a Norwegian airline until Partnair Flight 394, and the worst disaster on Norwegian soil until Vnukovo Airlines Flight 2801. It was also the first fatal crash of a Fokker Fellowship.

Contents

[edit] Aircraft

The aircraft was a Fokker F28 Fellowship, with tail number LN-SUY and nicknamed Sverre Sigurdsson. It had entered service in 1969. On this flight there were 42 passengers and a crew of 3. This was the first Fokker F-28 Fellowship in commercial service.

[edit] Crash

The plane crashed near the Asdøltjern Lake, 15 km from the airport, whilst making a night time approach to Fornebu airport. The plane was flying too low and was somewhat off course, perhaps because the crew had taken a shortcut. Fog and low clouds may also have contributed to the accident. When rescue teams arrived at about 23:00, they found only seven survivors, two of whom died shortly afterwards.

A memorial to the victims was erected near the crash site in 1998.

[edit] External links

[edit] See also

[edit] Other references