Belavia Flight 1834 Explained

Type:Loss of control following stall shortly after take-off
Occurrence Type:Accident
Site:Zvartnots International Airport, Yerevan, Armenia
Fatalities:0
Injuries:7[1]
Aircraft Type:Bombardier CRJ100ER
Operator:Belavia
Iata:B21834
Icao:BRU1834
Callsign:BELAVIA 1834
Occupants:21
Passengers:18
Crew:3
Survivors:21
Origin:Zvartnots International Airport
Yerevan, Armenia
Destination:Minsk National Airport
Minsk, Belarus

Belavia Flight 1834 was a scheduled international passenger flight from Yerevan, Armenia, to Minsk, Belarus, operated by Belavia. On the morning of February 14, 2008, the Bombardier Canadair Regional Jet carrying 18 passengers and three crew crashed and burst into flames shortly after take off from Zvartnots International Airport near Yerevan, the capital of Armenia.

The captain was 50-year-old Viktor Shishlo, who had logged 9,215 flight hours, including 461 hours on the CRJ100. The first officer was 44-year-old Alexander Mukhin, who had 9,454 flight hours with 405 of them on the CRJ100.[2] [3]

Fire and rescue crews were reportedly on site within 50 seconds after the crash. The passengers also helped the crew members out of the cockpit.[4]

None of the 21 occupants were killed, although seven passengers received serious injuries.[1]

Aircraft

The aircraft involved was a Bombardier CRJ100ER, MSN 7316, registered as EW-101PJ, that was built by Bombardier Aviation in 1999. It had logged approximately 15563 airframe hours and 14352 takeoff and landing cycles. It was also equipped with two General Electric CF34-3A1 engines.[5]

Investigation

Initial speculation pointed to icing on the wings which caused the left wing to stall upon lift-off. Icing conditions were reported at the airport during the crash, and the CRJs are very prone to wing contamination and icing since they do not have any leading edge devices.[6]

Investigation teams from the General Department of Civil Aviation of Armenia, from Belarus, and from Bombardier participated in the investigation to determine the probable cause of the accident.[7]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Final report, section 1.2, page 12.
  2. Web site: 2009-06-04. Final Report of Belavia Flight 1834. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120216200754/http://www.mak.ru/russian/investigations/2008/report_ew-101pj.pdf. 2012-02-16. 2009-08-31. Interstate Aviation Committee.
  3. News: Plane crashes in Armenia's capital . Alaska Report . 2008-02-14 . 2008-02-15 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080217172338/http://alaskareport.com/news28/z49113_yerevan_plane_crash.php. 17 February 2008 . live.
  4. News: Black Boxes Being Transcribed . Panorama.am . 2008-02-14 . 2008-02-15.
  5. Web site: Loss of control Accident Canadair CL-600-2B19 Regional Jet CRJ-100ER EW-101PJ, Thursday 14 February 2008 . 2024-07-24 . asn.flightsafety.org.
  6. Book: Tanner, Clinton E. . SAE Aircraft and Engine Icing International Conference, Session: Airplane De / Anti-icing Operations - Part I . The effect of Wing Leading Edge Contamination on the Stall Characteristics of aircraft . 10.4271/2007-01-3286 . September 2007 . SAE . Seville, Spain.
  7. Web site: Kaminski-Morrow. David. 2008-02-15. Crashed Belavia CRJ rolled left after becoming airborne. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20080219163502/http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2008/02/15/221595/crashed-belavia-crj-rolled-left-after-becoming-airborne.html. 19 February 2008. 2008-02-15.