Mohawk Airlines Flight 40 Explained

Mohawk Airlines Flight 40
Date:June 23, 1967
Type:Mechanical failure, causing
In-flight fire
• Structural failure
• Loss of control
Occurrence Type:Accident
Site:Blossburg, Pennsylvania
Coordinates:41.6825°N -77.0514°W
Aircraft Type:BAC 1-11 204AF
Aircraft Name:Discover America
Operator:Mohawk Airlines
Tail Number:N1116J
Plane1 Origin:Syracuse Hancock International Airport, Syracuse, NY
Plane1 Stopover:Elmira Corning Regional Airport, Elmira, NY
Plane1 Destination:Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Washington D.C.
Occupants:34
Passengers:30
Crew:4
Fatalities:34
Survivors:0

Mohawk Airlines Flight 40 was a scheduled passenger flight between Syracuse, New York and Washington, DC, with an intermediate stop in Elmira, New York. On June 23, 1967 it suffered a loss of control and crashed, killing all 30 passengers and four crew on board. It was the deadliest disaster in the airline's history. A valve in the auxiliary power unit had suffered a complete failure, spreading fire to the tailplane, causing a loss of pitch control.

Aircraft and crew

This particular BAC 1-11 was new, having had its first flight the previous year. Its airframe had accumulated 2,246 hours in total. It was equipped with two model 506-14 Spey engines manufactured by Rolls-Royce. Its registration number was N1116J with the aircraft name Discover America.[1]

The captain was 43-year-old Charles E. Bullock, who had logged 13,875 flight hours, including 603 hours on the BAC 1-11. The first officer was 33-year-old Troy E. Rudesill, who had 4,814 flight hours, with 667 of them on the BAC 1-11.

History of flight

The aircraft, a BAC 1-11, took off from runway 24 at Elmira Corning Regional Airport at approximately 14:39 EDT.[2] It was cleared to climb to 16000feet five minutes later. Nine minutes after that, several eyewitnesses saw large pieces of the tailplane break away from the aircraft with flames and smoke coming out from the fuselage, as the flight proceeded south from Mansfield, Pennsylvania.[2] The aircraft subsequently lost control and plunged into a heavily wooded area served only by dirt roads. No one on the ground was hurt, but there were no survivors aboard the plane. Thereafter, the air traffic controller at New York Center vectored a Piper Aztec over the area of Flight 40's target disappearance. The pilot of this plane reported observing the burning wreckage of an airplane, which was later identified as Flight 40.[2]

The plane gouged a strip through the woods about 100yd wide and 500yd long. The tail section was thrown 400yd from the impact site of the crash. Some of the witnesses were workmen at a coal strip mine who immediately took a bulldozer and plowed two roads through to the site a mile and a half away.[3]

Shortly after the incident, Robert E. Peach, president of Mohawk, demanded an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. In a telegram to J. Edgar Hoover, director of the F.B.I., Mr. Peach wrote: "Evidence has developed in the course of notification of next of kin of crash victims which leads to strong suggestion of sabotage. Mohawk Airlines formally demands that the F.B.I. investigate the possibility of sabotage." However, Mr. Peach did not make public the nature of the "evidence."[4]

Investigation

The National Transportation Safety Board launched a full investigation. The findings of that investigation are as follows:

A non-return valve in the auxiliary power unit had suffered a complete failure. This allowed bleed air from the engine to flow through the system in the wrong direction. This air exited at the start of the system at sufficient temperatures to ignite components there. The fire quickly spread to the hydraulics in the aircraft, and moved along the hydraulic lines to the rear of the plane. There, it caused heavy damage to the tail, causing a loss of pitch control which sent the airplane diving into the ground.[2]

Aftermath

In July 1967, the National Transportation Safety Board made three safety recommendations to the Federal Aviation Administration, which issued Airworthiness Directive 68-01-01 to prevent heat damage or fire in the airframe plenum of the auxiliary power unit installation. [5] On 23 June 2017, a memorial was erected to honor the victims.[6]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19670623-1 Accident Description
  2. Web site: Mohawk Airlines, Inc., BAC 1-11, N1116J, Near Blossburg, Pennsylvania, June 23, 1967 . 2022-06-24 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20220126023339/https://libraryonline.erau.edu/online-full-text/ntsb/aircraft-accident-reports/AAR68-AG.pdf . 2022-01-26 .
  3. Web site: Mohawk Airlines Flight 40: 50th Anniversary of Crash . Ross . Michelle . 23 May 2017 . www.mytwintiers.com . Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc. .
  4. Web site: Jet crash kills 34 in Pennsylvania; President of Mohawk Line Suggests Plane Going to Capital Was Sabotaged; Crash in Pennsylvania Kills All 34 on Mohawk Jet . 24 June 1967 . . 7 July 2020.
  5. Web site: Amendment 39-5956; AD 68-01-01 R1, Airworthiness Directive; British Aerospace Model BAC 1-11 200 and 400 Series . July 18, 1988 . rgl.faa.gov . . 7 July 2020.
  6. Web site: Mohawk Flight 40 memorial service, stone monument to be put in place . Ross . Michelle . 23 June 2017 . www.mytwintiers.com . Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc. . 7 July 2020.