Misplaced Pages

Interflug Flight 102

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
1989 East German plane crash
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Interflug Flight 102" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Interflug Flight 102
An Interflug Il-62, similar to the one involved in the crash
Accident
Date17 June 1989
SummaryRunway excursion on take-off
SiteBerlin Schönefeld Airport
52°23′18″N 13°31′12″E / 52.388333°N 13.52°E / 52.388333; 13.52
Aircraft
Aircraft typeIlyushin Il-62M
OperatorInterflug
IATA flight No.IF102
ICAO flight No.IFL102
Call signINTERFLUG 102
RegistrationDDR-SEW
Flight originBerlin Schönefeld Airport, East Berlin, East Germany
DestinationMoscow-Sheremetyevo Airport, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Occupants113
Passengers103
Crew10
Fatalities21
Survivors92

Interflug Flight 102 ended in a crash involving an Ilyushin Il-62M on 17 June 1989. The aircraft, while attempting to take off from Berlin Schönefeld Airport, East Germany, crashed into obstacles on the ground at the end of its takeoff, costing 21 lives.

Incident

At 6:20 am Berlin time, the aircraft started its four Soloviev D-30KU engines to prepare for departure. The unlocking of the flight controls should have immediately followed. According to the cockpit voice recorder (CVR), the crew did not perform this task. The crew did not check the warning panel displaying the elevator condition. While the captain was taxiing to the runway, he checked a second time for elevator movement and failed to notice that the elevators were locked and unable to be moved.

The aircraft was cleared for takeoff on runway 25L and the engines were adjusted to a derated thrust level due to the airplane's low weight at departure of 113 tons. At 6:28:05 local time, the aircraft reached the rotation speed (VR). The crew pulled on the yoke to raise the nose of the airplane, but the plane did not respond. Four seconds later, the captain decided to abort the takeoff. At this moment, the speed of the plane was 293 km/h (158 kn; 182 mph). The flight engineer shut down all four engines, which prevented the use of reverse thrust. The plane was now traveling at 303 km/h (164 kn; 188 mph), 940 metres (3,080 ft) from the end of the runway.

The plane overran the end of the runway at 262 km/h (141 kn; 163 mph), veering left of the centerline. During the emergency braking, five of the tires on the main landing gear were destroyed. The plane entered a 40 cm (16 in) deep construction pit, causing the main landing gear to collapse. Active steering on this make of aircraft was not available at this time. The aircraft then collided with a water tank, concrete portions of the fence that surrounds the airport, a road embankment and six trees. This broke the plane into three pieces and caught fire. At 6:28:37 local time, the plane slid to a halt.

Rescue workers first arrived at the wreckage at 6:38, and rescued 82 passengers within the first 2 minutes. The front part of the fuselage containing the cockpit remained relatively intact, allowing some of the cabin and cockpit crew to use the cockpit window openings to escape the burning plane. The airline crew assisted the rescue workers in evacuating the passengers. The flames were fully extinguished by 8:09. The accident ultimately resulted in 21 fatalities; 19 died at the scene, while two more succumbed at the hospital. Contributing to the crash was the locking of some of the flight controls; whether this was due to a mechanical issue or the crew missing a step could not be proven.

Aftermath

All eleven of Interflug's Il-62s were temporarily grounded with nine cleared to return to service the day after the crash.

References

  1. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Ilyushin Il-62M DDR-SEW Berlin-Schönefeld Airport (SXF)". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 2021-01-18.
  2. ^ "Flugunfall der IL-62M DDR-SEW am 17. Juni 1989 in Schönefeld" [Air accident involving the IL-62M DDR-SEW on June 17, 1989 in Schönefeld]. www.interflug.biz (in German). Retrieved 2021-01-18.
Aviation accidents and incidents in 1989 (1989)
Jan 4 Air battle near TobrukJan 8 Kegworth air disasterFeb 8 Independent Air Flight 1851Feb 19 Flying Tiger Line Flight 66Feb 24 United Airlines Flight 811Mar 10 Air Ontario Flight 1363Mar 18 Evergreen International Airlines Flight 17Mar 21 Transbrasil Flight 801Apr 10 Uni-Air International Flight 602Jun 7 Surinam Airways Flight 764Jun 17 Interflug Flight 102Jul 4 Belgium MiG-23 crashJul 19 United Airlines Flight 232Jul 21 Philippine Airlines Flight 124Jul 27 Korean Air Flight 803Aug 3 Olympic Aviation Flight 545Aug 13 Alice Springs hot air balloon crashAug 15 China Eastern Airlines Flight 5510Aug 25 Pakistan International Airlines Flight 404Sep 3 Cubana de Aviación Flight 9046Sep 3 Varig Flight 254Sep 8 Partnair Flight 394Sep 19 UTA Flight 772Sep 20 USAir Flight 5050Oct 18 Soviet Air Force Ilyushin Il-76 crashOct 21 TAN-SAHSA Flight 414Oct 26 China Airlines Flight 204Oct 28 Aloha IslandAir Flight 1712Nov 21 Aeroflot Flight 37577Nov 25 Korean Air Flight 175Nov 27 Avianca Flight 203Nov 27 Angola Lockheed L-100 crashDec 15 KLM Flight 867Dec 26 United Express Flight 2415
1988   ◄    ►   1990
Aviation accidents and incidents in Germany
German Empire
(1871–1918)
Nazi Germany
(1933–1945)
Occupied Germany
(1945–1949)
West Germany
and
West Berlin
(1949–1990)
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
East Germany
(1949–1990)
Germany
(1990–)
Aviation incidents that took place in West Berlin, or involved an approach for there, are marked with an asterisk (*).
Categories: