One-Two-Go Airlines Flight 269 | |
Occurrence Type: | Accident |
Summary: | Loss of control after a failed go-around attempt |
Site: | Phuket International Airport, Phuket, Thailand |
Coordinates: | 8.1142°N 98.3206°W |
Aircraft Type: | McDonnell Douglas MD-82 |
Operator: | One-Two-Go Airlines |
Tail Number: | HS-OMG |
Origin: | Don Mueang International Airport, Bangkok, Thailand |
Destination: | Phuket International Airport, Phuket, Thailand |
Occupants: | 130 |
Passengers: | 123 |
Crew: | 7 |
Fatalities: | 90 |
Injuries: | 40 |
Survivors: | 40 |
Icao: | OTG269 |
Iata: | OG269 |
Callsign: | THAI EXPRESS 269 |
One-Two-Go Airlines Flight 269 (OG269) was a scheduled domestic passenger flight from Bangkok to Phuket, Thailand. On 16 September 2007, about 15:41 ICT, the McDonnell Douglas MD-82 operating the flight crashed into an embankment beside runway 27 at Phuket International Airport (HKT) bursting into flames upon impact during an attempted go-around after an aborted landing, killing 90 of the 130 people on board (this includes one person who died of burn injuries several days after the crash).[1] It is the third deadliest aviation incident to occur in Thailand.[2]
The crash report was published by the Aircraft Accident Investigation Committee (AAIC) of the Ministry of Transport.[3] A separate two-year report done by the United States National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) was incorporated into the AAIC report. Both reports found that the captain and first officer had worked hours in excess of the legal flight limits; that the first officer attempted to transfer control to the captain during the go-around; that neither pilot initiated a go-around and that the training and safety programs at the airline were deficient.
Between 2009 and 2010 One-Two-Go Airlines was prohibited from operating in European Union nations due to safety concerns.[4] At the time of the accident, the airline was owned by Orient Thai Airlines and in July 2010, it fully re-branded as Orient Thai Airlines.
On the day of the crash, the McDonnell Douglas MD-82[5] departed Bangkok's Don Mueang International Airport, Thailand at 14:31 en route to Phuket International Airport as flight number OG269. The flight crew consisted of Captain Arief Mulyadi (57), an Indonesian national and the Chief Pilot of One-Two-Go Airlines, and a former Indonesian Air Force pilot, and First Officer Montri Kamolrattanachai (30), a Thai national who had recently completed his flight training with One-Two-Go's ab initio program. Arief had 16,752 flight hours, including 4,330 hours on the MD-82, while Montri had 1,465 hours, 1,240 of them on the MD-82. The aircraft was carrying 123 passengers and seven crew members. OG269 was the fourth of six flights between Bangkok and Phuket that Arief and Montri were scheduled to fly that day.[3]
On approach to Phuket, Captain Arief made several radio communications errors including read-back/hear-back communications[3] and misstating their flight number. First Officer Montri was the flying pilot.[3]
Another aircraft landed immediately prior to Flight 269 and experienced wind shear. That aircraft's captain contacted the tower and reported wind shear on final and cumulonimbus over the airport, a report audible to all incoming aircraft. Air Traffic Control requested Flight 269 acknowledge the weather information provided and re-state intentions. Captain Arief acknowledged the transmission and stated his intention to land.[3]
OG269 conducted an ILS approach just north of the centerline on runway 27. As the landing proceeded, ATC reported increasing winds at 240 degrees from 15-, then to 40kn. Captain Arief acknowledged the reports. ATC requested intentions again. Captain Arief said, "Landing".[3]
As the aircraft descended to above threshold level (ATL), its airspeed dropped. Captain Arief repeatedly called for more power as First Officer Montri attempted the landing. The aircraft continued to descend and fell below ATL, causing the auto-throttle to reduce engine thrust to idle. One second later, First Officer Montri called "Go Around". This was acknowledged by the captain. The first officer then attempted to transfer control of the aircraft to Captain Arief. There was no verbal acknowledgement of this from Captain Arief.[3]
The pilots retracted the landing gear and set flaps for go-around. The aircraft pitch changed from 2 degrees to 12 degrees as the aircraft climbed, its engines still at idle. Airspeed fell and the aircraft climbed to a maximum altitude of ATL before beginning to descend. For 13 seconds the engines remained at idle. The aircraft pitch angle decreased to near zero and then the throttle was manually increased two seconds before impact with an embankment along the runway at 15:40. The aircraft was destroyed on impact along with a post-crash fire.[3]
Rescue efforts were hampered by a 4adj=onNaNadj=on ditch beside and parallel to runway 27 running the length of the runway. Rescue vehicles were unable to cross this ditch, though they could have entered at either end of the runway, which none did. One survivor complained that only a single ambulance arrived.
Additional fire and rescue from the town of Phuket arrived 30 minutes later. Additionally, the airport failed to include "crash on airport" procedures in its air service manual as required by ICAO.
The aircraft, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82, with line number 1129 and manufacturer's serial number 49183, made its first flight on 13 November 1983, later delivered on 20 December 1983 and first operated by Trans World Airlines as N912TW later transferred to American Airlines as part of the merger between the 2 airlines before being acquired by the airline in February 2007, 7 months before the crash and registered as HS-OMG.[6]
Of the 130 people on board, 85 passengers and five crew members (including both flight crew members) died.[1] [7]
The airline contacted the rest of the victims' families for evidence to aid in identification. Some victims suffered head injuries caused by dislodged baggage. Others were trapped and burned alive in the cabin. Many survivors sustained burns.[8]
Various embassies and ministries in Bangkok confirmed the following numbers:[9]
According to Vutichai Singhamany, a safety director at Thailand's Department of Civil Aviation and the lead crash investigator, the pilot had deployed the landing gear on approach to Phuket airport runway 27, but had retracted it when attempting a go-around. Singhamany added that the wheels had not touched the runway and that the accident had happened moments after the pilot raised the nose of the aircraft to abort the landing.[22] [23]
At the time of the crash, speculation rested on the pilot's decision to land in poor weather conditions and on the airport's wind shear detection system, which was not operational that day. In the weeks after the crash, Vutichai continued to indicate wind shear as the likely cause.
As the accident involved a U.S. manufactured aircraft, the United States National Transportation Safety Board participated in the accident and arrived on site within days. The NTSB inspected the aircraft and the crash scene, and interviewed survivors and witnesses. They took information obtained from the flight data recorder ("black box") to the United States for analysis. The flight data recorder immediately yielded significant facts about the flight, including:
After completing the inspection of the aircraft, the NTSB found it to have functioned properly and to have remained fully controllable until impact. The cause of the crash was found to be due to a combination of human performance and operational issues, including:
Human Performance:
Operational:
The NTSB noted that, "although the weather deteriorated in the later stages of this flight, wind shear was not a factor in this accident" and "It is understood that during the accident sequence, the pilots were potentially distracted by the weather conditions; however, that distraction should not cause a loss of control of the airplane."
The U.S. NTSB stated that the possible causes of this accident, consistent with available evidence, are that:The crew did not properly perform the go-around and failed to activate the TO/GA switch. Although the throttles remained available to the crew to advance power, they did not, nor did they monitor the throttles during the go-around. A transfer of controls, from the copilot to the pilot, occurred at a critical point in the go-around. The airplane's flight management system automatically retarded the throttles, since the approach slat/flap logic for landing was met. Lacking power application, the airplane slowed and descended until contact with the terrain.
The Thai AAIC added that the flight crew did not follow the standard operating procedure of a stabilized approach, call outs, and emergency situations as specified in the airline's flight operation manual. Their co-ordination was insufficient, they had heavy workloads and accumulated stress, had insufficient rest, and were fatigued. The weather conditions changed suddenly prompting the go-around attempt.[24]
On 28 July 2008, Thai DCAT censured Orient Thai Airlines and One-Two-Go airlines over a number of issues,[25] including:
The Air Operator's Certificate of One-Two-Go Airlines was revoked, grounding the airline for 30 days.
In April 2009, One-Two-Go Airlines was added to the EU blacklist.[26] It was removed shortly thereafter.[27] In September 2010, the One-Two-Go brand was dropped and the airline was merged with Orient Thai Airlines.