Aeroflot Flight 8641
Aeroflot Yak-42, similar to the one that crashed | |
Accident summary | |
---|---|
Date | June 28, 1982 |
Summary | Jackscrew failure due to metal fatigue; design flaw |
Site | Near Mozyr, Soviet Union |
Passengers | 124 |
Crew | 8 |
Fatalities | 132 (all) |
Survivors | 0 |
Aircraft type | Yakovlev Yak-42 |
Operator | Aeroflot |
Registration | CCCP-42529 |
Flight origin | Pulkovo Airport, Leningrad, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union |
Destination | Kyiv-Zhuliany International Airport, Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union |
Aeroflot Flight 8641 was a Yakovlev Yak-42 airliner on a domestic scheduled passenger flight from Leningrad, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, to Kiev, Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. On June 28, 1982, the flight crashed near Mozyr, Belorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, killing all 132 people on board. The crash was the first and deadliest one involving a Yakovlev Yak-42, as well as the deadliest aviation accident in Belarus.[1][2]
Aircraft and crew
The aircraft involved in the accident was a Yakovlev Yak-42 registered to Aeroflot as CCCP-42529. The aircraft made its maiden flight on 21 April, 1981. At the time of the accident the aircraft had only 795 airframe hours and 496 cycles (one cycle equals one takeoff and landing).[3]
There were eight crew members, with four cockpit crew and four flight attendants.
The cockpit crew consisted of the following:[4]
- Captain Vyacheslav Nikolaevich Musinsky (born October 23, 1947)
- Co-pilot – Alexander Stigarev (born 15 July 1949)
- Navigator – Viktor Ivanovich Kedrov (born 17 September 1952)
- Flight engineer – Nikolai Semenovich Vinohrady (born July 22, 1938)
The flight attendants were as follows:[4]
- Anna Nikolaevna Sheykina (born February 9, 1940)
- Tamara Vasishcheva (born 25 September 1941)
- Olga P. Pavlova (born December 1, 1947)
- Yuri Ryabov (born 13 May 1959)
Sequence of events
The aircraft took off from Pulkovo Airport at 9:01 GMT, after stopping to pick up passengers who were running late. At 10:45 the aircraft entered the zone of Boryspil air traffic control center. The crew started to prepare for descent at 10:48:01. At 10:48:58 the crew contacted the air traffic controller and requested to land early. The controller instructed them to remain in a holding pattern at 7800 meters. The crew confirmed the flight path and no further communications were heard from flight 8641. At 10:51:20 the autopilot gradually brought about stabilizer angle of up to 0.3° into the descent for landing. Suddenly at 10:51:30 the stabilizer angle sharply increased, exceeding the 2° limit. The sudden change resulted in an overload of 1.5 g, but the autopilot adjusted the wheel and controls to lower it to 0.6 g. After the pilots pulled back on the yoke to level out the plane the autopilot switched off after three seconds, putting the aircraft into a steep dive.[3] While struggling to maintain control the pilots pulled on the control columns, but the plane rolled 35° and went into a dive of 50°; at 10:51:50 and enduring well over 2 g forces the aircraft lost control and went into a dive, disintegrating in mid-air.
Cause
The cause was discovered 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 along with poor maintenance was the control system of the stabilizer not meeting basic aviation standards, as for the official cause of the crash; "The spontaneous movement of the stabilizer was due to disconnection in flight of jackscrew assembly due to the almost complete deterioration of 42M5180-42 thread-nuts due to structural imperfections in the mechanism." As a consequence of the accident, all Yak-42s were temporarily withdrawn from service until the design defect was rectified in October 1984.[1][5][3]
See also
- Alaska Airlines Flight 261 – another accident resulting from a jackscrew failure.
References
- 1 2 "Aviation Safety Network".
- ↑ "УПАВШИЕ С НЕБА. Архив БГ. №29 (345) 29 июля 2002 г.. БелГазета. Новости Беларуси. Белорусские новости". www.belgazeta.by. Retrieved 2017-01-11.
- 1 2 3 "Катастрофа Як-42 Ленинградского УГА близ Наровли, Белоруссия (борт СССР-42529), 28 июня 1982 года. // AirDisaster.ru – авиационные происшествия, инциденты и авиакатастрофы в СССР и России – факты, история, статистика". www.airdisaster.ru. Retrieved 2017-01-11.
- 1 2 Документальный детектив (2014-09-15), Документальный детектив – Ленинград-Киев. Прерванный полёт..., retrieved 2017-01-11
- ↑ Gordon, Komissarov and Komissarov 2005, p. 315.
Coordinates: 52°03′00″N 29°16′00″E / 52.0500°N 29.2667°E