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Avianca Flight 011, registration HK-2910X,[1] was a Boeing 747-200B on an international scheduled passenger flight from Frankfurt via Paris, Madrid, and Caracas to Bogotá, Colombia that crashed near Madrid on 27 November 1983. It took off from Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris at 22:25 on 26 November 1983 for Madrid Barajas Airport; take-off was delayed waiting for additional passengers from a Lufthansa flight due to a cancellation of the Paris-Frankfurt-Paris segment by Avianca for operational reasons.[2][3]

Avianca Flight 011
HK-2910X, the aircraft involved, photographed in August 1983
Accident
Date27 November 1983
SummaryControlled flight into terrain due to pilot error, navigational error, and ATC error
SiteMejorada del Campo, near Madrid Barajas International Airport
Madrid, Spain
40°24′12″N 3°26′57″W
Aircraft
Aircraft typeBoeing 747-283B
Aircraft nameOlafo
OperatorAvianca
IATA flight No.AV011
ICAO flight No.AVA011
Call signAVIANCA 011
RegistrationHK-2910X
Flight originFrankfurt Airport
West Germany
[lower-alpha 1]
1st stopoverCharles de Gaulle Airport
Paris, France
2nd stopoverMadrid Barajas International Airport
Madrid, Spain
Last stopoverSimón Bolívar Int'l Airport
Caracas, Venezuela
DestinationEl Dorado International Airport
Bogotá, Colombia
Occupants192
Passengers169
Crew23
Fatalities181
Injuries11
Survivors11

During the instrument landing system (ILS) approach to runway 33, the 747 crashed on a hill approximately 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) south east of the airport, killing 181 people, including 19 on-duty and four off-duty crew members. The 11 surviving passengers were seriously injured.[4] The cause of the accident was judged to be pilot error, the captain having incorrectly determined the position of the plane.[1] As of 2022, Avianca Flight 011 remains the second-deadliest aviation accident in Spanish territory behind the Tenerife airport disaster, the deadliest accident in mainland Spain, and the deadliest accident in the history of Avianca.[5]


Aircraft and crew


The aircraft was a Boeing 747-200 that first flew in 1977 and was delivered to Scandinavian Airlines the same year. The aircraft was registered as LN-RNA and was named Magnus Viking. It was leased to Avianca in 1982 and re-registered as HK-2910X and renamed Olafo. The aircraft was powered by four Pratt & Whitney JT9D-70A turbofan engines and was 6.3 years old at the time of the accident.[6][7]

The captain was 58-year-old Tulio Hernández, who was one of Avianca's most experienced pilots, having been with the airline for 32 years. He had logged a total of 23,215 flight hours, including 2,432 hours on the Boeing 747.[8]

The first officer was 36-year-old Eduardo Ramírez, who had been with the airline for 10 years and had 4,384 flight hours, with 875 of them on the Boeing 747.[9]

The flight engineer was 57-year-old Juan Laverde, another one of Avianca's veteran pilots, who had been with the airline for 25 years and had 15,942 flight hours. He was the most experienced on the Boeing 747, having logged 3,676 hours on it.[2] There were also two relief flight engineers on board: Daniel Zota and Julio Florez Camacho.[2]


Accident


It was nighttime at the time of the accident, the meteorological conditions just before the crash consisted of a visibility of 8 kilometres (5 mi), and the wind was calm.[3] About 20 minutes prior to the impact, the aircraft had obtained meteorological information on the weather conditions at Barajas from Avianca. The first contact with Spanish air traffic controllers had taken place at 23:31.[2] At 00:03 the aircraft contacted Barajas again, and was cleared to land on runway 33; this was the air traffic controller's last contact with the aircraft.[2] The accident took place in the township of Mejorada del Campo, approximately 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) southeast of the Madrid Airport. The time of the accident was approximately 00:06 on 27 November. The plane hit three different hills on its way down during the crash, with the third hill being the final impact. The debris of the airplane was widely scattered as a consequence of the impacts. The crash killed 158 passengers, 19 crew members, and four off-duty crew members. Miraculously, 11 passengers (6 women and 5 men) survived, but were seriously injured. Of the injured, nine were ejected from the airplane, a few of them still in their seats, and two claimed to have exited the aircraft by themselves.[2][10] The aircraft was completely destroyed by the impact and ensuing fire.[2] The airplane was equipped with a digital flight data recorder and a cockpit voice recorder, both of which were recovered on the day of the accident in good condition.[2]


Investigation


The crash was investigated by the Spanish Civil Aviation Accident and Incident Investigation Commission (CIAIAC).[1]

PROBABLE CAUSE: "The pilot-in-command, without having any precise knowledge of his position, set out to intercept the instrument landing system (ILS) on an incorrect track without initiating the published instrument approach maneuver; in so doing, he descended below the sector minima until he collided with the ground. Contributory factors were:

There was no evidence of any anomalies in Paris prior to this flight. The crew had stayed in the city 72 hours after arriving on flight AV010 on the first day, 24 November 1983.[2] The investigation also determined that the pilot-in-command and crew were properly licensed and qualified, as were the air traffic controllers. The aircraft carried a valid certificate of airworthiness, as well as a registration and maintenance certificate. The airplane was maintained in accordance with the prescribed maintenance program, and the navigation and approach aids were checked and found to be functioning correctly. In addition, there was no record of malfunctions in the controllers' communications or radar equipment, and no evidence was discovered of defects in the aircraft engines or systems.[2][11]


Flight Number


As of 2022, Avianca still operates Flight 011, a daily non-stop flight from Madrid to Bogota, using a Boeing 787 Dreamliner.[12]


Notable people killed



See also



Notes


  1. The first segment was cancelled for this flight.

References


  1. Ranter, Harro. "Accident description". aviation-safety.net. Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  2. "ICAO Circular (196-AN/119)" (PDF). Aircraft Accident Digest. International Civil Aviation Organization. 30: 105–141. 1983. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 February 2015.
  3. Gero, David (29 May 2009). Aviation Disasters: The World's Major Civil Airliner Crashes Since 1950. History Press. pp. 251–. ISBN 978-0-7524-9992-5.
  4. "176 Are Believed Killed in Crash Of 747 Jet Near Madrid's Airport: Airliner Crashes Near Madrid". The New York Times. Vol. 133, no. 45,875. Reuters. November 27, 1983. Retrieved 23 December 2016.
  5. "Death Toll in the Crash of 747 Jet Near Madrid Airport Rises to 183". The New York Times. Vol. 133, no. 45,876. Associated Press. November 28, 1983. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 23 December 2016.
  6. "HK-2910X Avianca Boeing 747-200M". www.planespotters.net. Retrieved 2020-11-24.
  7. "Avianca HK-2910X (Boeing 747 - MSN 21381) (Ex LN-RNA)". www.airfleets.net. Airfleets aviation. Retrieved 2020-11-24.
  8. "Relatives of Madrid crash victims help identify charred bodies". United Press International. 1983-11-30. Retrieved 2020-11-24.
  9. Yárnoz, Carlos (1985-03-13). "El localizador parece que, si está, está mal. Espero" [The locator seems that, if it is, it is wrong. I hope]. El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2020-11-24.
  10. Roberts, Lawrence (1983-11-28). "Investigators today investigated why an Avianca airlines jumbo jet..." UPI. Retrieved 2020-11-24.
  11. Rempel, William C. (1991-03-10). "COLUMN ONE: A People Problem in the Air : Technology and engineering advances have made the machinery of air travel safer. But federal records disclose a vast array of procedural blunders by pilots and air traffic controllers". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2020-11-24.
  12. "AV11 (AVA11) Avianca Flight Tracking and History". FlightAware. Retrieved 2020-08-20.


External images
Pre-Crash photos of HK-2910 at Airliners.net
Photo of the crashed airliner from AirDisaster.com[Usurped!]

На других языках


[de] Avianca-Flug 011

Am 27. November 1983 verunglückte eine Boeing 747 auf dem Avianca-Flug 011 (Flugnummer: AV011) nahe dem Flughafen Madrid-Barajas, nachdem die Maschine die Sicherheitsflughöhe unterschritten hatte. Bei dem Unfall kamen 181 Insassen ums Leben; 11 Fluggäste wurden schwer verletzt. Der Zwischenfall ist nach der Flugzeugkatastrophe von Teneriffa der bislang zweitschwerste Flugunfall in Spanien.
- [en] Avianca Flight 011

[fr] Vol Avianca 011

Le Vol 011 Avianca était un vol entre Francfort et Bogotá en Colombie, via Paris et Madrid.

[it] Volo Avianca 011

Il volo Avianca 011 era un volo passeggeri di linea internazionale da Francoforte via Parigi, Madrid e Caracas con destinazione Bogotà, in Colombia, che si schiantò il 27 novembre 1983. Era operato da un Boeing 747-283B con numero di registrazione HK-2910X.[2] Decollò dall'aeroporto Charles de Gaulle di Parigi alle 22:25 del 26 novembre 1983 in direzione dell'aeroporto Barajas di Madrid; il decollo fu ritardato in attesa di ulteriori passeggeri da un volo della Lufthansa a causa della cancellazione del segmento Parigi-Francoforte-Parigi da parte di Avianca per motivi operativi.

[ru] Катастрофа Boeing 747 под Мадридом (1983)

Катастрофа Boeing 747 под Мадридом (1983) — крупная авиационная катастрофа, произошедшая 27 ноября 1983 года. Авиалайнер Boeing 747-283BM авиакомпании Avianca выполнял плановый межконтинентальный рейс AV011 по маршруту Париж—Мадрид—Каракас—Богота, но при заходе на посадку в Мадриде из-за ошибок экипажа зацепил несколько холмов и разрушился. Из находившихся на его борту 192 человек (173 пассажира и 19 членов экипажа) выжили 11.



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