Crash of a Beechcraft C-45J Expeditor in Barrow

Date & Time: Oct 31, 1969 at 1645 LT
Type of aircraft:
Registration:
N437PA
Survivors:
Yes
Schedule:
Fairbanks - Barrow
MSN:
3845
YOM:
1943
Location:
Crew on board:
2
Crew fatalities:
Pax on board:
8
Pax fatalities:
Other fatalities:
Total fatalities:
0
Captain / Total flying hours:
12020
Captain / Total hours on type:
1141.00
Circumstances:
On final approach to Barrow, an engine failed. The crew reduced his altitude and attempted an emergency landing. The airplane crash landed and slid for dozen yards before coming to rest few hundred yards short of runway threshold. All 10 occupants evacuated safely while the aircraft was damaged beyond repair.
Probable cause:
Engine failure on final approach. The following factors and findings were reported:
- Improper maintenance on part of the maintenance personnel,
- Anti-icing, de-icing system,
- Icing conditions including sleet and freezing rain,
- Engine icing,
- The crew failed to use or incorrectly used the miscellaneous equipment,
- Ice on propeller,
- Airframe ice,
- Complete engine failure,
- Hot air lines to intake air duct loose.
Final Report:

Crash of a De Havilland DHC-6 Twin Otter 100 in Sagwon: 2 killed

Date & Time: Sep 6, 1969 at 0135 LT
Operator:
Registration:
N2711N
Flight Type:
Survivors:
No
Schedule:
Fairbanks - Sagwon
MSN:
38
YOM:
1967
Location:
Crew on board:
2
Crew fatalities:
Pax on board:
0
Pax fatalities:
Other fatalities:
Total fatalities:
2
Captain / Total flying hours:
2136
Captain / Total hours on type:
236.00
Circumstances:
On final approach to Sagwon on a cargo flight from Fairbanks, the crew encountered poor weather conditions with low clouds. While descending to a height of 175 feet, the aircraft struck the ground in an approximately 30° bank near level pitch attitude and crashed. Both crew members were killed.
Probable cause:
Improper IFR operation on behalf of the crew which resulted in an uncontrolled collision with ground. The following factors were considered as contributing:
- Low ceiling,
- Weather considerably worse than forecast.
Final Report:

Crash of a De Havilland DHC-6 Twin Otter in Lake Minchumina: 1 killed

Date & Time: Mar 13, 1969 at 1552 LT
Operator:
Registration:
N4901
Survivors:
Yes
Schedule:
Fairbanks – Lake Minchumina – Bethel
MSN:
3
YOM:
1966
Crew on board:
1
Crew fatalities:
Pax on board:
4
Pax fatalities:
Other fatalities:
Total fatalities:
1
Captain / Total flying hours:
10104
Captain / Total hours on type:
796.00
Circumstances:
On final approach to Lake Minchumina Airport, the pilot encountered whiteout conditions and lost control of the airplane that crashed few dozen yards short of runway. A passenger that was killed while four other occupants were injured.
Probable cause:
Loss of control after the pilot suffered spatial disorientation on final approach in whiteout conditions.
Final Report:

Crash of a Lockheed L-382B-10C Hercules in Prudhoe Bay: 2 killed

Date & Time: Dec 24, 1968 at 0430 LT
Type of aircraft:
Operator:
Registration:
N760AL
Flight Type:
Survivors:
Yes
Schedule:
Fairbanks - Prudhoe Bay
MSN:
4229
YOM:
1967
Crew on board:
4
Crew fatalities:
Pax on board:
0
Pax fatalities:
Other fatalities:
Total fatalities:
2
Captain / Total flying hours:
18000
Captain / Total hours on type:
936.00
Circumstances:
During the final approach completed by night, the crew encountered poor weather conditions with snow falls. At an altitude of 200 feet, the pilot-in-command lost sight of the runway and decided to attempt a go-around when the airplane struck obstacles and crashed short of runway. Two crew members were killed while two others were injured.
Probable cause:
The accident was probably caused by the combination of the following factors:
- The pilot-in-command continued under VFR mode into adverse weather conditions,
- Delayed in initiating go-around,
- Downdrafts,
- Obstruction to vision,
- Blowing snow,
- Pilot lost visual reference due to blowing snow.
Final Report:

Crash of a Rockwell Aero Commander 520 in Fairbanks: 2 killed

Date & Time: Aug 22, 1964 at 1825 LT
Operator:
Registration:
N688C
Flight Type:
Survivors:
No
Crew on board:
1
Crew fatalities:
Pax on board:
1
Pax fatalities:
Other fatalities:
Total fatalities:
2
Captain / Total flying hours:
2500
Circumstances:
On final approach to Fairbanks Airport, the twin engine aircraft was too low and struck the slope of a mountain located few miles from the runway. The wreckage was found a week later and both occupants were killed.
Probable cause:
Uncontrolled descent for undetermined reason.
Final Report:

Crash of a Lockheed PV-2T Harpoon in Fort Yukon: 1 killed

Date & Time: Aug 9, 1958
Type of aircraft:
Registration:
N7457C
Flight Phase:
Flight Type:
Survivors:
Yes
Schedule:
Aklavik – Fairbanks
MSN:
15-1594
YOM:
1945
Crew on board:
2
Crew fatalities:
Pax on board:
0
Pax fatalities:
Other fatalities:
Total fatalities:
1
Circumstances:
The twin engine aircraft crashed in unknown circumstances in Fort Yukon. The copilot was killed while the captain was injured.

Crash of a Douglas C-54B-20-DO Skymaster near Blyn: 5 killed

Date & Time: Mar 2, 1957 at 1719 LT
Type of aircraft:
Operator:
Registration:
N90449
Flight Phase:
Survivors:
No
Site:
Schedule:
Fairbanks – Seattle
MSN:
27239
YOM:
1944
Flight number:
AS100
Location:
Crew on board:
3
Crew fatalities:
Pax on board:
2
Pax fatalities:
Other fatalities:
Total fatalities:
5
Captain / Total flying hours:
12033
Captain / Total hours on type:
8023.00
Copilot / Total flying hours:
10791
Copilot / Total hours on type:
4532
Aircraft flight hours:
28835
Circumstances:
Alaska Airlines, Inc., is an air carrier certificated to conduct scheduled operations within the Territory of Alaska and between Alaska and the continental United States. Flight 100 of March 2 originated at Fairbanks, Alaska, as a regularly scheduled nonstop flight to Seattle, Washington. The aircraft, N 90449, had arrived from Seattle at 0717 March 2 as Trip 101/1. Two minor discrepancies reported by the inbound crew were corrected during a turnaround inspection and by 0930 that morning the aircraft was ready for the return flight to Seattle. The crew assigned to Flight 100, Captain Lawrence F. Currie, Copilot Lyle O. Edwards, and Stewardess Elizabeth Goods, arrived at operations and made the normal routine preparations for the flight. The pilots discussed the flight with the station agent and all necessary flight papers were completed. Weather for the route was given to the pilots. The weight and balance were determined and both were well within allowable limits. The aircraft was serviced with 2,380 gallons of fuel. The following IFR flight plan was filed with Fairbanks ARTC (Air Route Traffic Control): Alaska 100, a DC-4, departing 10,000 feet Amber 2 Snag, 12,000 Blue 79 Haines, 10,000 Blue 79 Annette, 9,500 direct Port Hardy, 10,000 Amber 1 Seattle; airspeed 185; estimating 7 hours, 44 minutes en route; proposing 0955. At 0940 the two passengers and crew boarded the aircraft. Takeoff was made in VFR weather conditions at 0958. Shortly thereafter Fairbanks center called N 90449 and relayed the ATC clearance, approving the flight plan as filed. The weather conditions at Fairbanks and en route were forecast to be generally good and the flight proceeded in the clear as planned, making routine position reports as it progressed. At 1240, when over Haines, Alaska, at 12,000 feet, Flight 100 canceled its instrument flight plan and informed ARTC that they would proceed VFR to Annette and would file DVFR 2 (Defense Visual Flight Rule) after Annette and before entering the CADIZ (Canadian Air Defense Identification Zone). Thereafter the flight proceeded, reporting its position as DVFR at 1,000 feet. The flight was observed at Patricia Bay, British Columbia, at an estimated 3,000 feet m. s. l. by a tower operator. It was also observed leaving the CADIZ. At 1717 the Alaska Airlines Seattle dispatch office received the following position report by radio from Flight 100: "Dungeness at 16 VFR estimating Seattle at 34." This was the last contact with the flight, which crashed shortly thereafter. All five occupants were killed. N 90449 crashed in heavily timbered mountainous terrain March 2 and was not located until March 3, 1957. The crash occurred approximately in the center of the "on course" zone of the northwest leg of the Seattle low frequency radio range, about 11 nautical miles southeast of the Dungeness fan marker. This leg of the Seattle range defines the center of Amber Airway 1 between the Dungeness intersection and the range station. The minimum instrument en route altitude for this segment is 5,000 feet. Because of adverse weather and inaccessibility of the location, CAB investigators were unable to reach the scene until March 6. The investigators noted that the wreckage had been disturbed prior to their arrival; some components were missing, presumably carried away by persons unknown. The path of the aircraft during the final seconds of flight was clearly defined in the heavy timber growing on the steep slope against the aircraft smashed. The aircraft’s first contact with the trees was at a point 650 feet from the wreckage. From this point it cut a level swath on a heading of 106 degrees magnetic, the width of its wing span, into the steeply rising wooded slope at an elevation of approximately 1,500 feet m. s. l. The terrain immediately ahead of the aircraft‘s path rose to an altitude of 2,000. 2,100 feet MSL.
Probable cause:
The Board determines that the probable cause of this accident was a navigational error and poor judgment exhibited by the pilot in entering an overcast in a mountainous area at a dangerously low altitude. The following findings were reported:
- No malfunction or emergency existed and the aircraft was intact prior to its initial contact with the mountain,
- Several errors and omissions in the course of the flight Indicate the crew was lax and not giving proper attention to their duties,
- A navigational error resulted in the aircraft being three to four miles west of the flight path assumed by the crew,
- The pilot flew into instrument weather without obtaining a proper clearance,
- The aircraft crashed in terrain obscured by clouds.
Final Report:

Crash of a Curtiss C-46F-1-CU Commando near Fairbanks: 4 killed

Date & Time: Dec 30, 1951 at 2207 LT
Type of aircraft:
Operator:
Registration:
N68963
Flight Type:
Survivors:
No
Site:
Schedule:
Point Barrow – Umiat – Fairbanks
MSN:
22485
YOM:
1945
Flight number:
TL501
Crew on board:
2
Crew fatalities:
Pax on board:
2
Pax fatalities:
Other fatalities:
Total fatalities:
4
Captain / Total flying hours:
7034
Captain / Total hours on type:
150.00
Copilot / Total flying hours:
2552
Copilot / Total hours on type:
196
Aircraft flight hours:
1937
Circumstances:
Transocean Air Lines, an irregular carrier, is currently engaged in Alaskan air transport for the United States Navy as part of its operations. Flight 501 South was made in connection with this contract. Upon departure from Point Barrow at 1655, December 30, 1951, the aircraft carried six passengers, 9,243 pounds of cargo, 275 pounds of baggage, 900 gallons of gasoline, and the two crew members, Captain R. R. Warren and First Officer R. V. Irwin. This loading resulted in a gross takeoff weight of 47,646 pounds (allowable 48,000 pounds), and the disposable load was properly distributed with relation to the center of gravity. The following IFR (Instrument Flight Rules) flight plan was filed with ARTC (Air Route Traffic Control) at Point Barrow; Point Barrow to Umiat via Amber Airway 2 at 4,000 feet mean sea level; Umiat to Bettles via Amber 2 at 10,000 feet; Bettles to Nenabank intersection 2 via Amber 2 at 8,000 feet; and Nenabank intersection to Fairbanks via Green 7 at 5,000 feet. Big Delta, 70 miles southeast of Fairbanks, was the alternate airport. Weather forecasts indicated instrument and on-top flight conditions en route; an instrument approach was anticipated at Fairbanks. The flight arrived at Umiat at 1754, remaining there for one hour and 56 minutes. The captain and first officer were advised by the CAA communications station employee of a recent repositioning of the north leg of the Bettles radio range, with a resultant change in quadrant signals. Both pilots, while in the CAA INSAC (Interstate Airways Communications) station, received the 1928 weather information. The 1810 weather, which included route and terminal forecasts and winds aloft, was also available to the crew. Winds from 240 degrees at 40-60 knots were forecast for cruising altitude to Nenabank intersection; thence to Fairbanks the forecast was 240 degrees at 30-40 knots. Upon departing Umiat at 1950, the takeoff gross weight of the aircraft was 36,373 pounds. The only passengers aboard were two employees of Wien Alaska Airlines who were carried nonrevenue through a mutual assistance agreement between the two companies. Their names were entered on the flight plan as additional crew members. The flight reported over Bettles at 2053. At 2744 it reported 25 miles northwest of Nenabank intersection, estimating there at 2150. An ARTC clearance was delivered to the flight at 2144, clearing it to the Fairbanks radio range station, to cruise and maintain 8,000 feet to the Nenabank intersection, and then maintain 5,000 feet to Fairbanks. At 2148, the flight reported over Nenabank intersection at 8,000 feet, descending to 5,000 feet IFR, and estimating Fairbanks at 2200. At 2155, it reported reaching 5,000 feet. At 2157, the flight was cleared for a standard range approach to Fairbanks, to cross Fairbanks at 4,000 feet. The flight again contacted Fairbanks at 2205 and advised as follows: "ADF OUT HAVE MISSED CONE PROCEEDING OUT WEST LEG WILL CALL WHEN OVER STATION." At 2206 Fairbanks requested confirmation that the flight was proceeding out the west leg, and at 2207 this confirmation was received from the pilot. This was the last message received and it is believed that the aircraft crashed immediately thereafter. The wreckage was found in a hilly terrain on January 3, 1952. The aircraft was destroyed upon impact and all four occupants have been killed.
Probable cause:
The Board determines that the probable cause of this accident was the failure of the pilot to follow procedures and utilize properly the radio facilities for approach and letdown at Fairbanks, with the result that the flight became lost. The following findings were pointed out:
- Weather conditions were substantially the same as forecast and would not have precluded a successful approach and landing at the terminal point,
- The flight was considerably off course when initially positioned by radar, and was shortly thereafter plotted on the west and east legs of the Fairbanks range for 12 minutes,
- All ground radio facilities functioned normally, and all radio contacts with the flight were normal,
- The flight made an authorized left turn while outbound on the east leg of the Fairbanks radio range and subsequently struck a mountain northeast of the station while on a westerly heading.
Final Report:

Crash of a Boeing B-29-95-BW Superfortress near Nome: 2 killed

Date & Time: Dec 23, 1947
Type of aircraft:
Operator:
Registration:
45-21775
Flight Phase:
Flight Type:
Survivors:
Yes
Site:
Schedule:
Ladd - Ladd
MSN:
13669
Location:
Crew on board:
8
Crew fatalities:
Pax on board:
0
Pax fatalities:
Other fatalities:
Total fatalities:
2
Circumstances:
The crew left Ladd Army Airfield in the day for a 15 hours training sortie. While flying over the Seward Peninsula at low height, the four engine aircraft christened 'The Clobbered Turkey' hit the slope of Mt Hot Springs. The aircraft was written off but all eight crew members survived. Two of them decided to walk away to find help but were found dead few days later. Six other occupants were rescued later and three rescuers were killed as well during the salvage operations.
Crew:
Lt Vern H. Arnett, pilot,
Lt Donald B. Duesler, copilot,
Lt Frederick E. Sheetz, navigator,
Lt Lyle B. Larson, flight engineer,
Lt Francis Schaack, radar operator,
T/Sgt Wilbur E. Decker, electrical mechanic,
Sgt Olan R. Samford, radio operator,
S/Sgt Leslie R. Warre, photographer.
Source:
http://vintageairphotos.blogspot.ch/2014/12/the-legacy-of-clobbered-turkey-tragedy_19.html

Crash of a Douglas C-47A in Nome: 4 killed

Date & Time: Sep 7, 1946
Registration:
NC91002
Survivors:
No
Site:
Schedule:
Fairbanks – Nome
MSN:
20227
YOM:
1944
Location:
Crew on board:
2
Crew fatalities:
Pax on board:
2
Pax fatalities:
Other fatalities:
Total fatalities:
4
Circumstances:
On approach to Nome Airport, the crew encountered poor weather conditions with low visibility. Apparently to establish a visual contact with the ground, the pilot reduced his altitude and passed below 400 feet when the aircraft hit the slope of a mountain shrouded by clouds. The aircraft was destroyed by impact forces and all four occupants were killed.