Aeroflot Flight 415

Aeroflot Flight 415

An Antonov An-10, similar to the one involved in the accident
Accident summary
Date 28 July 1962
Summary CFIT due to crew and ATC errors
Site 21 km southeast of Sochi Airport
Passengers 74
Crew 7
Fatalities 81 (all)
Survivors 0
Aircraft type Antonov An-10A
Operator Aeroflot
Registration CCCP-11186
Flight origin Snilow Airport
Stopover Simferopol Airport
Destination Adler/Sochi Airport

Aeroflot Flight 415 (Russian: Рейс 415 Аэрофлота Reys 415 Aeroflota) was a domestic scheduled passenger flight operated by Aeroflot from Lviv to Sochi with a stopover in Simferopol. On 28 July 1962 the Antonov An-10 operating the route crashed, killing all 81 passengers and crew on board.[1]

Aircraft

The aircraft involved in the accident was an Antonov An-10A with four Ivchenko AI-20K engines, registered CCCP-11186 to the Ukraine division of Aeroflot. At the time of the accident the aircraft had sustained 1,358 flight hours and 1,059 pressurization cycles.[2][3]

Passengers and crew

74 passengers and seven crew members were aboard Flight 415. The cockpit crew consisted of the following:[2]

Stewardesses Ivanna Nakonechna and Dina Dobrovolskaya worked in the cabin.

Well-known nuclear physicist Nathan Aronovich Yavlinsky, designer of tokamak devices, was on the flight with his family.[4]

Description of accident

At 14:37 the An-10 departed from Simferopol Airport and proceeded on the route at an altitude of 6000 meters. At 15:06 the flight was passed over to Sochi air traffic control. At 15:29 the crew of the An-10 contacted air traffic control and were instructed to proceed on a bearing of 240° and given information regarding the weather; mild winds at 3–4 m/s were present. The controller failed to inform the flight crew about the cloudcover at approximately 600 meters on the mountains nearby. Shortly thereafter the aircraft was given permission to decrease altitude to 500 meters. At 15:37 the crew reported they were at the new assigned altitude and still on a bearing of 240°; to which the controller responded with by ordering the flight to change course to a bearing of 60°; after which the air traffic controller was replaced when shifts were changed. When the air traffic controller noticed the aircraft approaching the mountains, he ordered the flight to change course to the left by 20°, when in fact it would have taken a minimum of 60° to avoid the mountains. At 15:41 and at an altitude of 500 meters, the aircraft crashed into the 700 meter tall mountain, killing all 81 people aboard the plane.[3]

Causes

Numerous errors were responsible for the crash, including but not limited to:[3]

Aftermath

After the crash the approach by the mountains was banned. All incoming aircraft to Sochi Airport now carry out approach over the sea.[3]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.