Aeroflot Flight 065 Explained

Aeroflot Flight 065
Occurrence Type:Accident
Summary:Crew and ATC errors
Site:Sheremetyevo International Airport
Occupants:66
Passengers:47
Crew:19
Fatalities:21
Survivors:45
Aircraft Type:Tupolev Tu-114
Operator:Aeroflot
Tail Number:CCCP-76491
Origin:Sheremetyevo International Airport, Moscow, Russian SSR
Stopover0:Conakry International Airport, Conakry, Republic of Guinea[1]
Stopover1:Kotoka International Airport, Accra, Ghana
Destination:Maya-Maya Airport, Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo

Aeroflot Flight 065 was a scheduled passenger flight operated by the International Civil Aviation Directorate division of Aeroflot. On 17 February 1966 at 1:38 am local time a Tupolev Tu-114 crashed during take-off from Sheremetyevo International Airport in Moscow, killing 21 of the 47 passengers and 19 crew members on board.[2] This was the only fatal incident involving a Tu-114.[3] A committee investigating the accident found that the crash was due to multiple crew and ATC failures.

Accident

On 16 February at 11:35 pm the crew of flight 065 were preparing for departure and received a weather report of visibility, with mist, light snow and a relative humidity of 100 percent. Recent snow had been cleared from the runway but not from its full width. A strip approximately wide had been plowed down the center of the concrete runway leaving snow deep along the runway edges.

The visibility minimum for takeoff of a TU-114 was . At 1:37 am the aircraft crew radioed the control tower requesting the actual visibility and the controller reported . The controller later testified that he counted the runway edge lights he could see looking down the runway. He believed the distance between these lights to be when in fact it was .[4]

At 1:38 am the aircraft began its take-off roll one degree to the right of the runway center line. Approximately 30 seconds later the aircraft was down the runway when the crew realized they were approaching the plowed snow on the right edge and overcorrected to the left four degrees. When the aircraft reached, down the runway the pilot rotated the nose wheels off the ground. At a distance of from the beginning of the runway, accelerating through, the left main landing gear entered the deep snow, causing the aircraft to yaw left and pitch down. The left main gear then impacted a runway edge light. Instead of aborting the take-off the pilot banked right, striking the propellers of engines 3 and 4 on the runway. The aircraft then spun to the right, flipped over and burst into flames. The forward fuselage and main wing section were completely destroyed. The force of the impact tore away the tail section and it came to rest inverted separated from the burning forward section. Many of the survivors were seated in this part of the aircraft.[5]

Aircraft

The accident aircraft was a Tupolev Tu-114 with aircraft registration CCCP-76491 and manufacturer's serial number 64M472. The airliner was manufactured in 1964, delivered to Aeroflot on 12 December of that year and entered service on 18 November 1965; it was the last Tu-114 produced.[5]

At the time of the accident, it had accumulated 93 hours with 19 take-off/landing cycles, and flown approximately .[5]

Investigation

In a report released 12 May 1966 the investigating board indicated the main causes of the crash were errors made by the aircraft crew and poor organization of the airport traffic control service. Contributing factors included limited visibility in poor weather conditions and failure to properly clear the runway of snow.[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Register of aircraft type Tupolev tu-114/116/126. russianplanes.net. 31 January 2017.
  2. Web site: Plane crash of Tu-114 TU MVL GA Sheremetyevo Airport. en.avia.pro. 29 January 2017.
  3. Web site: Accident Details . planecrashinfo.com. 26 January 2017.
  4. Web site: The disaster TU-114, TU MVL HECTARES at Sheremetyevo. www.airdisaster.ru. 31 January 2017.
  5. Web site: Register of aircraft type Tupolev tu-114/116/126. russianplanes.net. 20 January 2017.