MK Airlines Flight 1602

Coordinates: 44°51′43.9″N 63°31′55.1″W / 44.862194°N 63.531972°W / 44.862194; -63.531972
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MK Airlines Flight 1602
The aircraft involved in the incident at Filton Airfield, England on 10 October 2004, four days prior to the accident
Accident
Date14 October 2004
SummaryPilot error due to inadequate company-related management of aircraft
SiteHalifax Stanfield International Airport,
Nova Scotia, Canada
Aircraft
Aircraft typeBoeing 747-200F
Aircraft name(previously Waterberg)
OperatorMK Airlines (previously South African Airways)
Registration9G-MKJ (Previously ZS-SAR)
Flight originBradley International Airport,
Windsor Locks, Connecticut, US
StopoverHalifax Stanfield International Airport,
Enfield, Nova Scotia, Canada
DestinationZaragoza Airport,
Spain
Passengers0
Crew7
Fatalities7 (all)

MK Airlines Flight 1602 was a MK Airlines Boeing 747-200F cargo flight on a flight from Halifax Stanfield International Airport, Nova Scotia, Canada to Zaragoza Airport, Spain. It crashed on take-off killing the crew of 7.[1]

Incident

The jet lifted off from Halifax, but struck the ground shortly beyond the runway. Following lift-off the tail of the jet bounced twice off the tarmac near the end of the runway and separated from the plane when it hit a mound of earth 300 metres beyond the end of the runway. The plane then headed forwards in a straight line, breaking into pieces.[2]

Rescue

Over 80 firefighters and 20 pieces of apparatus from Halifax Regional Fire and Emergency responded to the call.

Investigation

An investigation into the crash revealed that the flight crew had used the incorrect speeds and thrust setting during the take-off attempt, with incorrect take-off data being calculated when preparing the flight (incorrect V speed calculation, as the result of the crew re-using a lighter take-off weight of 240,000 kg from the aircraft's previous take-off at Bradley, instead of the correct weight of 353,000 kg). The official report blamed the company for serious non-conformances to flight and duty time, with no regulations or company rules governing maximum duty periods for loadmasters and ground engineers, resulting in increased potential for fatigue-induced errors.[3]

MK Airlines disputed the findings, citing the fact that the cockpit voice recorder was too heavily damaged in the post-crash fire to yield any information. [1]

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.airfleets.net/crash/crash_report_MK%20Airlines_9G-MKJ.htm
  2. ^ http://www.iasa.com.au/folders/Safety_Issues/dfdr-cvr/MK747fhalifax.html
  3. ^ "Reduced Power at Take-off and, Collision with Terrain, MK Airlines Limited, Boeing 747-244SF 9G-MKJ, Halifax International Airport, Nova Scotia. Report Number A04H0004" (PDF). Canadian Transportation Safety Board. Retrieved 8 September 2010. (French version)

External links

External images
image icon Photos of the crashed airliner from AirDisaster.com
image icon Pre-crash photos of the airliner at airliners.net

44°51′43.9″N 63°31′55.1″W / 44.862194°N 63.531972°W / 44.862194; -63.531972