Ozark Air Lines Flight 809

Ozark Air Lines Flight 809
Ozark Air Lines Flight 809
Accident summary
Date 23 July 1973
Type Windshear accident
Site Normandy, Missouri
38°43′07″N 90°18′30″W / 38.71861°N 90.30833°W / 38.71861; -90.30833Coordinates: 38°43′07″N 90°18′30″W / 38.71861°N 90.30833°W / 38.71861; -90.30833
Passengers 41
Crew 3
Injuries 0
Fatalities 38 (all)
Survivors 6
Aircraft type Fairchild-Hiller FH-227
Operator Ozark Air Lines
Tail number N4215
Flight origin Nashville International Airport, Nashville, Tennessee
1st stopover Clarksville-Montgomery County Regional Airport, Clarksville, Tennessee
2nd stopover Paducah Airport, Paducah, Kentucky
3rd stopover Cape Girardeau Airport, Cape Girardeau, Missouri
4th stopover Williamson County Regional Airport, Marion, Illinois
Destination St. Louis International Airport, St. Louis, Missouri

Ozark Air Lines Flight 809 was a regularly scheduled flight from Nashville, Tennessee to St. Louis, Missouri, with intermediate stops at Clarksville, Tennessee, Paducah, Kentucky, Cape Giradeau, Missouri, and Marion, Illinois. On July 23, 1973, while landing at St. Louis, it crashed, killing 38 of the 44 persons aboard. Windshear was cited as the cause.

Contents

Synopsis

On July 23, 1973, Ozark Air Lines Flight 809 was operated by one of the company's Fairchild-Hiller FH-227's, registration N4215. The flight was scheduled to go from Nashville, Tennessee to St. Louis, Missouri, with 4 intermediate stops. The segments to Clarksville, Paducah, Cape Girardeau, and Marion proceeded normally. [1]

While the weather was clear at the flight's stops, several persons who boarded family or friends on the flight at Marion reported that the sky "didn't look good". [2] The flight departed Marion at 1705 en route to St. Louis.

At 1726 the flight arrived in the vicinity of St. Louis. [3] Visibility in the area was reported as hazy. The flight continued on, and soon after reported an inoperative fuel pump to company maintenance.

At 1732 the flight entered an area of thunderstorm cells around St. Louis Airport. The pilot told the passengers they were approaching turbulence. [4] At 1742 the controller at St. Louis reported to Flight 809 that thunderstorms were passing south of the runway, directly in Flight 809's path. This was the last transmission to the flight. The aircraft crashed 2 miles short of the runway, in a wooded ravine next to a residential area, near the University of Missouri-St. Louis.

Investigation

The flight had crashed directly in the approach path to St. Louis International Airport. It had descended below the glide slope, crashing short of the runway. Witnesses in the area saw the flight "suddenly ascend to 400 or 500 feet, and then rapidly descend to 200 feet", following which it was struck by lightning. [5] The aircraft was reported to have performed several "evasive maneuvers", and then crashed into the trees. All witnesses reported heavy rain at the time of the accident.

A Trans World Airlines flight landing just before Flight 809 reported getting caught in a strong updraft, and was forced to execute a missed approach, rather than land. [6]

The captain and first officer both survived the accident. While the first officer could not remember anything about the incident, the captain did report hail hitting the airplane, pulling the control stick, and seeing fire after impact. [7]

The aircraft was broken in several pieces after impact; the cockpit area was clear of the main wreckage. Four passengers were thrown clear at impact; all survived. The remainder of the fuselage was broken open; all in this area were killed upon impact. [8]

No mechanical defects, other than the inoperative fuel pump, were reported. The aircraft was found to be in a high nose up attitude at impact.

The approach controller vectored flight 809 in to Runway 30L at St. Louis. Although the flight crew knew thunderstorms were in the vicinity of the airport, the controller's lack of urgency seemed to lead the flight crew to believe they could land ahead of the storms. [9]

In coming through the storm, the high winds in the storm cell lead investigators to believe that a strong downdraft pushed the plane below the glide slope. The crew's evasive actions were not sufficient to prevent the plane from impacting the ground.

The investigator's main questions were why the controller had not indicated the severity of the storm to the flight, and, when the flight knew of the storms, why they had not requested a different path to the airport to avoid the storm. [10]

Cause

The National Transportation Safety Board concluded that the crash was caused by the aircraft encountering a severe downdraft on approach, and the captain's decision to continue the flight into a known severe storm area. The captain's decision was influenced by the lack of a timely warning about the storm by the weather service and the improper assesment of conditions by the dispatcher. [11]

See Also


References


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