- Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 705
-
Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 705 Occurrence summary Date 12 February 1963 Type Accident Site Everglades, west of Miami, Florida Passengers 35 Crew 8 Injuries 0 Fatalities 43 Survivors 0 Aircraft type Boeing 720-051B Operator Northwest Orient Airlines Tail number N724US Flight origin Miami International Airport, Florida, United States Destination O'Hare International Airport, Illinois, United States Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 705 was a scheduled passenger flight operated on 12 February 1963 by a Boeing 720 aircraft which broke up in midair and crashed into The Everglades shortly after take-off from Miami International Airport in a severe thunderstorm. The plane was destined to Portland, Oregon, via Chicago, Spokane and Seattle.
Accident
Prior to departing from Miami, the flight crew questioned the ground controller at the airport about the departure routes being used, and he replied that most flights were departing "either through a southwest climb or a southeast climb and then back over the top of it."
After the jet lifted off from runway 27L, the jet made a left turn based on radar vectors from Miami Departure Control, to avoid areas of anticipated turbulence associated with thunderstorm activity. Another flight had followed the same guidance shortly before the jet took off.
While maintaining 5,000 feet and a heading of 300 degrees, Flight 705 contacted controllers and requested clearance to climb to a higher altitude. After a discussion between the flight and the radar departure controller about the storm activity, and while clearance to climb was being coordinated with the Miami Air Route Traffic Control Center, the flight advised "Ah-h we're in the clear now. We can see it out ahead ... looks pretty bad."
At 13:43, Flight 705 was cleared to climb to flight level 250. They responded, "OK ahhh, we'll make a left turn about thirty degrees here and climb..." The controller asked if 270 degrees was their selected climbout heading, and they replied that this would take them "... out in the open again..." Controllers accordingly granted the jet clearance. Following some discussion about the severity of the turbulence, which was described as moderate to heavy, the flight advised, "OK, you better run the rest of them off the other way then."
At 13:45, control of Flight 705 was transferred to Miami Air Route Traffic Control Center. There were communication difficulties, although after the jet was provided with a different frequency to tune to, the flight crew established contact with Miami ARTCC. Several minutes after contact was established, the jet's altitude began increasing with a rate of climb gradually increasing to approximately 9,000 feet per minute. Following this rapid ascent the rate of climb decreased through zero when the altitude peaked momentarily at just above 19,000 feet. During this time the jet's airspeed decreased from 270 to 215 knots and as the peak altitude was approached, the vertical accelerations changed rapidly from 1G to about -2G.
In the next seven seconds the negative acceleration continued to increase at a slower rate, with several fluctuations, to a mean value of about -2.8G, the jet began diving towards the ground with increasing rapidness. As the descent continued with rapidly increasing airspeed, the acceleration trace went from the high negative peak to 1.5G, where it reversed again.
Below 10,000 feet the forward fuselage broke up due to the forces of the dive. The main failures in both wings and horizontal stabilizers were in a downward direction, and virtually symmetrical. The forward fuselage broke upward and the vertical stabilizer failed to the left. All four engines generally separated before the debris of the aircraft fell in unpopulated area of the Everglades National Park, 37 miles west-southwest of Miami International Airport.
Investigation
The NTSB's final report on the crash determined the cause of the accident to be the unfavourable interaction of severe vertical air drafts and large longitudinal control displacements, resulting in a longitudinal upset from which a successful recovery was not made.
References
- Flight Safety Network - Accident description
← 1962 · Aviation accidents and incidents in 1963 · 1964 → Jan 13 Elephant Mountain B-52 crash
Feb 12 Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 705
Jun 03 Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 293
Jul 02 Mohawk Airlines Flight 121Jul 03 NZ National Airways Flight 441
July 27 United Arab Airlines Flight 869 (1963)
Aug 21 Tupolev 124 Neva River ditching
Sep 04 Swissair Flight 306Oct 22 BAC One-Eleven test crash
Nov 06 Trans-Canada Air Lines Flight 861
Nov 29 Trans-Canada Flight 831
Dec 08 Pan Am Flight 214Incidents resulting in at least 50 deaths shown in italics. Deadliest incident shown in bold smallcaps. Categories:- Aviation stubs
- Aviation accidents and incidents in 1963
- Accidents and incidents on commercial airliners in the United States
- Accidents and incidents involving the Boeing 707
- Accidents and incidents on commercial airliners in Florida
- In-flight airliner structural failures
- Northwest Airlines accidents and incidents
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.