1962 LOT Vickers Viscount Warsaw crash explained

1962 LOT Vickers Viscount Warsaw crash
Occurrence Type:Accident
Date:19 December 1962
Summary:Loss of control on approach
Site:near Warszawa-Okecie Airport (WAW/EPWA)
Aircraft Type:Vickers 804 Viscount
Operator:LOT Polskie Linie Lotnicze
Tail Number:SP-LVB
Origin:Brussels Airport (IATA: BRU, ICAO: EBBR)
Stopover:Berlin-Schönefeld Airport (SXF/EDDB)
Destination:Warszawa-Okecie Airport (WAW/EPWA)
Passengers:28
Crew:5
Fatalities:33
Survivors:0

The 1962 LOT Vickers Viscount Warsaw crash occurred on 19 December 1962 when a Vickers Viscount 804, operated by LOT Polish Airlines on a flight from Brussels to Warsaw, crashed on landing. All passengers and crew died.

The plane was returning from Brussels, and had a mid-way landing in Berlin from where it took off at 5:55 pm. While on approach on runway 33 in Warsaw at 7:30 pm the crew received landing clearance. 46 seconds later the plane crashed and burned 1335 meters from the threshold.

All 33 people aboard died – the crew of 5 and 28 passengers. Among the victims was Heinz Rauch, head of the East German statistical service, along with his wife and two children.[1]

The Chief Committee of Aircraft Accident Investigation stated that at the time of the accident the plane was configured for landing (flaps set and landing gear lowered). It also stated there was no explosion mid-air and all damage was a result of the crash. The plane was landing in harsh, Winter weather conditions, with dense near-ground fog, 6/8 overcast, fractostratus clouds at 250 meters, 7-km visibility and temperature of 5 degrees below 0.

One of the probable causes of stalling due to low speed was attributed to turboprop engines features which change the propellers pitch during acceleration. Hence sudden throttle increase is not recommended. Such a maneuver was probably executed by the Captain who was accustomed to flying piston engine aircraft in which such maneuvers are allowed.[2] The Vickers Viscount 804 was one of three recently bought from British United Airways in England.[1] On LOT's roster the airliner had logged only 84 flight hours.

Official accident causes:

  1. Crew error
  2. Crew training errors[3]

There is a possibility that one of the NDB during approach was broken unbeknown to the crew.[4]

References

Notes and References

  1. 21 December 1962 . Po tragicznej katastrofie "Viscounta" na Okęciu: Ustalono już listę ofiar katastrofy . After the tragic crash of "Viscount" at Okęcie: The list of victims of the disaster has already been established . . pl . Gdańsk . XVIII . 302 . 9 May 2013.
  2. Web site: Drukuj Zatajone katastrofy polskiego lotnictwa . Print Concealed Polish aviation disasters . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150505055641/http://ciekawe.onet.pl/historia/zatajone-katastrofy-polskiego-lotnictwa,1,4795283,artykul.html . 2015-05-05 . 2024-02-20 . zapytaj.onet.pl . pl.
  3. Analiza stanu bezpieczeństwa lotniczego lata 1962–1982. Op. do użytku wewnętrznego [Analysis of the state of aviation safety in the years 1962–1982. Op. for internal use]
  4. Ziólkowski, Jerzy. "Na Lotowskich Szlakach" [On the Lotowskie Trails]