Puerto Carreno cargo 722 crash
Remember UTAGE at Cotonou...lots of similarities.
Hot, Heavy, Full loaded 722, It hapened before, still happens at Africa...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MjyDvHNr5LU
BTW, at "las2Orillas" clip we can see an explosion at second 29th.
Hot, Heavy, Full loaded 722, It hapened before, still happens at Africa...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MjyDvHNr5LU
BTW, at "las2Orillas" clip we can see an explosion at second 29th.
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At the expense of the lives of this crew.
After all, there is a difference between handling guns and actually playing Russian Roulette.
This company evidently made a habit of the latter. The spectators knew it, a small crowd was were waiting for - anticipating - spectacular video footage. These 727 take-offs were evidently a well known event that drew numbers of spectators. How long had the been doing this I wonder?
No amount of pressure on a crew can excuse taking part in something like that. Of course management must shoulder much of the blame but had the crew refused that loading there would have been no such flight and no such accident.
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In one of the videos of the crash scene it shows some one who appears to be a member of the crew alive, lying on the ground looking as if he does not have a scratch on him. One can only wonder how he has managed to survive such a catastrophic impact. Hopefully any surviving crew make a quick and full recovery.
It would seem like the RH outer Slat/s & wing would of smacked that existing tree & construction possibly, deforming the outer wing. Footage depicts it in a right hand turn prior to impact too. Simply unbelievable.
What a sad loss of life, and of a beautiful airliner too. RIP.
What a sad loss of life, and of a beautiful airliner too. RIP.
An awful lot of video footage captured from a "remote" part of the country.
....it may have been a rare occurrence seeing a jet, however, it was as though they were expecting something to happen.
....it may have been a rare occurrence seeing a jet, however, it was as though they were expecting something to happen.
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Actually I thought I saw something pouring even before it hit the fence, but i now think its an illusion, its the white fuselage showing between the wing and flaps. Combined with the rest of the fuselage it happens to look like something trailing the airplane?
Is it fully powered flight controls without any manual reversion on the 727? Could it be severed hydraulic lines that finally brought it down.
Isn't 6000ft a bit short for a fully loaded 727, even at sea level ?
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Making a steep turn at low level and low speed is never a good idea.
If they had climbed straight ahead, even at that minimal rate of climb, they might have been able to nurse it around gently and land back.
If they had climbed straight ahead, even at that minimal rate of climb, they might have been able to nurse it around gently and land back.
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- you can also see that the 727 has knocked down the reinforced concrete fence posts on both sides of the road. That must have hurt a bit. It's perhaps surprising the aircraft stayed airborne as long as it did. As it banks to the right it's clearly trailing vapour, which appears to thicken in the final second or so.
I don't speak Spanish and don't understand what the spectators were saying but they keep repeating a particular phrase. Can anyone translate this, please? I'm amazed one of them didn't get clouted.
I don't speak Spanish and don't understand what the spectators were saying but they keep repeating a particular phrase. Can anyone translate this, please? I'm amazed one of them didn't get clouted.
First footage
-Dude, that plane lost a tire! That plane lost a tire!
Second footage before the actual crash
-The plane is coming back, let's get out of here.
-There it comes turning, my God.
-It is dumping fuel in case it crashes.
-It is going to crash, oh my God.
-Keep filming, keep filming.
-Those people are dead.
-This **** cannot be true.
-We're going over there...
-No brother, where?
-There, to save the people...
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MarkerInbound
I noticed this as well, but it doesn't add up at all.
Personally, I highly doubt this was an intentional control input. Considering they must have realized early on, that they were at or beyond the performance envelope for the aircraft, there's about a zero percent chance any pilot would maneuver like that. In fact, you'd want to nurse the aircraft around slowly - or put it down somewhere (anywhere) if you're unable to make the turn.
This kinda reminds me of American 191. Is it possible that some sort of damage had allowed asymmetrical slat retraction on one wing? That diving bank angle just looks like a wing stall or something damage-induced.
I'm not sure what type of hydraulic failure could allow this, but maybe someone with more knowledge can chime in for me.
Making a steep turn at low level and low speed is never a good idea.
If they had climbed straight ahead, even at that minimal rate of climb, they might have been able to nurse it around gently and land back.
If they had climbed straight ahead, even at that minimal rate of climb, they might have been able to nurse it around gently and land back.
Personally, I highly doubt this was an intentional control input. Considering they must have realized early on, that they were at or beyond the performance envelope for the aircraft, there's about a zero percent chance any pilot would maneuver like that. In fact, you'd want to nurse the aircraft around slowly - or put it down somewhere (anywhere) if you're unable to make the turn.
This kinda reminds me of American 191. Is it possible that some sort of damage had allowed asymmetrical slat retraction on one wing? That diving bank angle just looks like a wing stall or something damage-induced.
I'm not sure what type of hydraulic failure could allow this, but maybe someone with more knowledge can chime in for me.
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Making a steep turn at low level and low speed is never a good idea.
If they had climbed straight ahead, even at that minimal rate of climb, they might have been able to nurse it around gently and land back.
If they had climbed straight ahead, even at that minimal rate of climb, they might have been able to nurse it around gently and land back.
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@ Hotel Tango
If the right wing clouted that black structure, whatever it is, the damage to slats, flaps or aileron might well have rendered the turn uncontrollable. Looking at the video it appears the initial turn to the right is relatively gentle but steepens as the aircraft turns through 180 degrees, at which point it appears to me the aircraft stalls and drops its right wing further. Perhaps trading speed for height stalled the damaged wing at a higher airspeed than expected, rather like the Chicago DC-10.
Or, the engine that burped finally failed, and at that speed and weight, and with flap damage, etc., the 727 could no longer be kept flying.
Not that there would seem to be a lot to learn from this event, mind. Yes, it does appear that Aerosucre takeoffs were a spectator sport, and given the proliferation of 'exciting' Aerosucre takeoff videos on YouTube and elsewhere, operating right on the edge of the envelope with no margin for error or unexpected performance loss appears to be normal for these chaps - the normalisation of deviation, indeed. Well, if you're going to push your luck like that, eventually something like this will happen.
Thanks for the translations, BTW.
Yes, but do we know for sure that the turn was intended?
Or, the engine that burped finally failed, and at that speed and weight, and with flap damage, etc., the 727 could no longer be kept flying.
Not that there would seem to be a lot to learn from this event, mind. Yes, it does appear that Aerosucre takeoffs were a spectator sport, and given the proliferation of 'exciting' Aerosucre takeoff videos on YouTube and elsewhere, operating right on the edge of the envelope with no margin for error or unexpected performance loss appears to be normal for these chaps - the normalisation of deviation, indeed. Well, if you're going to push your luck like that, eventually something like this will happen.
Thanks for the translations, BTW.
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Did it hit a building?
On this video of a previous takeoff there's an old stone building to the right of the centreline at 15 seconds.
On the accident flight from this angle as the aircraft passes over both fences while just kicking up dust and then a whole of thick black dust is thrown out from 30 seconds.
At 34 seconds on this video with your volume up you can hear an impact and see the debris.
Edit to say IronDuck beat me to it.
On this video of a previous takeoff there's an old stone building to the right of the centreline at 15 seconds.
On the accident flight from this angle as the aircraft passes over both fences while just kicking up dust and then a whole of thick black dust is thrown out from 30 seconds.
At 34 seconds on this video with your volume up you can hear an impact and see the debris.
Edit to say IronDuck beat me to it.
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Several have commented about the small building, lastly Flight Mode:
There appears to be human movement within that small building in the short 31sec clip. Perhaps watching the take-offs? Someone moves across the window line at 22sec.
Was anyone in there during the accident?
There appears to be human movement within that small building in the short 31sec clip. Perhaps watching the take-offs? Someone moves across the window line at 22sec.
Was anyone in there during the accident?
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I agree that there should be doubts about whether the turn was intentional, certainly it was very unwise if intended. Only a readout of the FDR will reveal the truth.
The primary cause, of course, appears to be a serious case of overloading but has the true weight of each item been declared, there have been several cases in the past of shennanegins in freight handling.
The primary cause, of course, appears to be a serious case of overloading but has the true weight of each item been declared, there have been several cases in the past of shennanegins in freight handling.