1974 Surgut mid-air collision

On Friday, 1 November 1974, an Antonov An-2 single-engine biplane and a Mil Mi-8 helicopter collided near Surgut airport, killing all 38 people (14 on the airplane and 24 on the helicopter) on board the two aircraft.[1]

1974 Surgut mid-air collision
Accident
Date1 November 1974 (1974-11-01)
SummaryMid-air collision
SiteSurgut, Soviet Union
Total fatalities38
Total survivors0
First aircraft

An An-2 similar to the one involved in the collision
TypeAntonov An-2
RegistrationCCCP-70766
Flight originKhanty-Mansiysk Airport
DestinationSurgut International Airport
Passengers12
Crew2
Fatalities14
Survivors0
Second aircraft

A Mi-8 similar to the one involved in the collision
TypeMil Mi-8
RegistrationCCCP-25686
Flight originSurgut International Airport
Passengers21
Crew3
Survivors0

Aircraft involved

The An-2 serial number 1G132-21 was registered USSR-70766 and was certified for operation on 4 November 1971. The airframe had a total operating time of 2,591 flight hours with 3,477 landings.[2]

The Mi-8T serial number 3771 was registered USSR-25686 and was certified on 8 June 1973. The total operating time of the helicopter was 1,298 hours with 3,416 landings.[2]

Accident

The An-2 was operating as Flight 662, a passenger service from Khanty-Mansiysk to Surgut and departed at 11:36 Moscow time with 2 crew members and 12 passengers. At 12:54, the Mi-8 took off from Surgut airport, despite the fact that the weather conditions were below its meteorological minimum. The An-2 was approaching Surgut airport on a heading of 253 degrees in instrument meteorological conditions, then turned to a heading of 73 degrees to land. The helicopter was leaving the airport on a heading of 220 degrees and at 12:56:36 (14:56:36 local time), approximately 4.5 kilometres (2.8 mi; 2.4 nmi) southwest of Surgut airport at an altitude of 150 metres (490 ft) the aircraft collided.[2]

Investigation

The main cause of the accident was the unsatisfactory management of the air traffic zone of Surgut airport. In the conditions of poor visibility, approach procedures were violated and dispatchers released and received aircraft despite the fact that meteorological minimums for these types were not met. A contributing factor was the lack of control over the movement of aircraft by radar and poor radio communication.[2]

See also

References

  1. "ASN Aircraft accident Antonov 2 CCCP-70766 Surgut". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 2018-05-13.
  2. "Столкновение в воздухе Ан-2 и Ми-8 в районе а/п Сургут". airdisaster.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2018-05-13.
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