1999_Glasgow_Airport_Cessna_404_crash

Edinburgh Air Charter Flight 3W

Edinburgh Air Charter Flight 3W

Aircraft accident


Edinburgh Air Charter Flight 3W, call sign "Saltire 3 Whisky", was a charter flight from Glasgow to Aberdeen. A Cessna 404 Titan, G-ILGW, was used for this flight. The flight had been chartered by Airtours International Airways to transport two pilots and seven flight attendants. Upon arrival in Aberdeen, the Airtours crewmembers were scheduled to operate a Boeing 757 on a charter flight to Palma de Mallorca.

Quick Facts Accident, Date ...

Shortly after takeoff, the left engine failed and the pilot-in-command feathered the right engine. Instead of attempting a crash landing, the pilot attempted to return to Glasgow Airport without engine power and lost control while trying to make a right turn. The aircraft crashed and caught fire approximately one nautical mile from the airport.[1][2][3] The two Edinburgh Air Charter pilots, the Airtours First Officer, and five AirTours flight attendants died in the crash. The AirTours captain and two flight attendants survived.

The aircraft was slightly overweight for the conditions. A report recommended engine inspections, more crash-worthy seats, and consideration to fitting aircraft like this with CVRs.[4][5] As a result of this accident an airworthiness directive was issued by the British Civil Aviation Authority in June 2000, requiring inspections of the starter adapters and crankshaft gears on Continental GTSIO-520 series engines.[4]

See also

Other cases where pilots shut down the wrong engine when dealing with engine failure:


References

  1. "Eight die in plane crash". BBC News. Retrieved 2 January 2015.
  2. "Horror of plane crash scene". Herald Scotland. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  3. "Cessna 404's Left Engine Fails on Takeoff, Captain Feathers Propeller on Right Engine" (PDF). Accident Prevention. September 2002. Retrieved 6 February 2015.

55.858°N 4.471°W / 55.858; -4.471



Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article 1999_Glasgow_Airport_Cessna_404_crash, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.