TANS Perú Flight 204
2005 aviation accident From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2005 aviation accident From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
TANS Perú Flight 204 was a domestic scheduled Lima–Pucallpa–Iquitos passenger service, operated with a Boeing 737-200 Advanced, that crashed on 23 August 2005 on approach to Pucallpa Airport, 4 miles (6.4 km) off the airfield, following an emergency landing attempt because of bad weather, killing 40 of the 98 passengers and crew aboard.
Accident | |
---|---|
Date | 23 August 2005 |
Summary | Controlled flight into terrain[1] due to pilot error in bad weather |
Site | Pucallpa, Peru 8°25′0″S 74°35′45″W[2]: 6 |
Aircraft | |
Aircraft type | Boeing 737-244 Advanced |
Operator | TANS Perú |
IATA flight No. | TJ204 |
ICAO flight No. | ELV204 |
Call sign | Aereos Selva 204 |
Registration | OB-1809-P |
Flight origin | Jorge Chávez International Airport Lima, Peru |
Stopover | Captain Rolden International Airport Pucallpa, Peru |
Destination | Coronel FAP Francisco Secada Vignetta International Airport Iquitos, Peru |
Occupants | 98 |
Passengers | 91 |
Crew | 7 |
Fatalities | 40 |
Injuries | 58 |
Survivors | 58 |
The aircraft involved was a 1981-built Boeing 737-244 Advanced registered OB-1809, which had been leased to TANS Perú from the South African lessor company Safair two months prior to the accident.[3] With manufacturer's serial number 22580 and powered with two Pratt & Whitney JT8D-17A engines, the airframe had its maiden flight on 4 August 1981, and was originally delivered to South African Airways.[1][4] At the time of the accident, the aircraft had accumulated 49,865 flight hours and 45,262 cycles,[2] and was 24 years old.
The captain was 45-year-old Octavio Perez Palma Garreta, who had 5,867 flight hours, including 3,763 hours on the Boeing 737. The first officer was 37-year-old Jorge Luis Pinto Panta, who had 4,755 flight hours, with 1,109 of them on the Boeing 737; 38-year-old Gonzalo Chirinos Delgado, a trainee pilot, was also on board. He had 2,700 flight hours, but only 61 of them on the Boeing 737.[3]: 7–10
An unusual cold front was developing in the vicinity of Pucallpa, minutes before the event took place, with cloud tops estimated to be 45,000 feet (14,000 m) high.[2] Instead of diverting to another airport, the crew initiated the approach to Pucallpa Airport with torrential rain, hail, and strong winds.[5] Some 10 minutes before the scheduled time for landing, the aircraft started rocking.[5] Realising that the airport could not be safely reached amid the worsening weather conditions, the pilot attempted an emergency landing. The aircraft was flying through a hailstorm for the last 32 seconds of its ill-fated flight when it was seemingly taken down by a wind shear, hit tree tops, impacted terrain in a swamp located 3.8 nautical miles (7.0 km; 4.4 mi) ahead of the runway threshold, broke up as it crash landed, and burst into flames, leaving a path of debris and flaming fuel 100 feet (30 m) wide and 0.8 nautical miles (1.5 km; 0.92 mi) long.[2][5] The wreckage of the airplane was engulfed by the fire.[2]
With 91 passengers and seven crew members on board, 35 passengers and five crew (including the three pilots) died in the accident.[2]: 7 Non-Peruvian occupants of the aircraft included 11 Americans, one Australian, one Colombian, and one Spanish; Italians were also aboard, but the actual number of them depend upon the source.[5][6] Most of the fatalities were recorded for passengers travelling in the front of the aircraft.[2] Fifty-eight people survived the accident, many of them suffering burns and broken limbs.[2][6]
Investigation of the crash site was hindered by looters, who descended upon the crash and stole various elements to be sold for scrap.[7] A US$500 (equivalent to $780.03 in 2023) reward did succeed in securing the return of the flight data recorder.[8] After 312 days of investigations, no technical malfunctions were reported.[2][1] The official cause of the accident was determined to be pilot error for not following standard procedures under adverse weather conditions.[2] The captain took control of the plane, but the trainee pilot did not immediately monitor the instruments; as a result, the crew did not notice the rapid descent in the few crucial seconds they had where they could have avoided danger. According to Aviation Safety Network, the accident ranks among the more deadly ones that took place in 2005.[9] It was also the second major crash involving a TANS Perú airplane in slightly over two years.[10][11]
Flight 204 has been the subject of a Reader's Digest story and an MSNBC documentary.[7][12] The Canadian TV series, Mayday, has also produced an episode about the accident named "Blind Landing".[13]
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