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-   -   Luxembourg Crash 6/11 (Threads Merged) (https://www.pprune.org/rumours-news/71818-luxembourg-crash-6-11-threads-merged.html)

Flypuppy 6th Nov 2002 08:38

Luxair aircaft down?
 
Have just heard that a Luxair aircraft has had an accident close to the airfield in Luxembourg. Anyone know anything?

Flight was inbound from Berlin, Fokker 50.

Reports say the aircraft has come down in fields close to Niederanven. 19 onboard plus 3 crew. No reports of casualties as yet.

Necromancer 6th Nov 2002 08:38

Crash Luxembourg
 
Fokker 50 crashed on approach 24 into LUX, near Niederanven. LUX airport closed.

Newsreports claim aircraft that crashed was LG flt from Berlin, having 17 on board, no news on crew or passengers yet.

Denti 6th Nov 2002 09:31

According to Reuters 19 Pax on board, at least 10 fatalities. Luxair flight from Berlin to Luxembourg. No further information at the moment :(

CR2 6th Nov 2002 09:36

Closed my previous. Salient points were;
LG9642 Berlin-Lux and weather;

ELLX 060720Z 16003KT 130V210 0100 R24/0275N FG BKN001 04/04 Q1024
NOSIG

RVR 150m if I remember correctly from the 0850Z atis.

Flypuppy 6th Nov 2002 09:50

Latest report is that the Captain has survived but sadly the First Officer and a number of passengers have not.

Thoughts and sympathies to all involved.

From the Reuters website:


LUXEMBOURG (Reuters) - A Luxair plane on a flight from Berlin has crashed in thick fog near Luxembourg airport, killing at least 10 people, according to a Luxembourg government.
Spokesman Guy Schuller said the twin-engine Fokker 50 plane carrying 19 passengers and three crew members crashed five km (three miles) from the Grand Duchy's international airport.

"Of the 19 passengers, there are reported to be seven or eight survivors," Schuller told Reuters on Wednesday.

The condition of the survivors was not immediately known.

The plane, on a scheduled flight from Berlin-Tempelhof airport, was making its final approach at around 10.15 a.m. (9:15 a.m. British time) when the crash occurred, officials said.

A spokesman for Belgium's defence ministry said Brussels had sent three helicopters to the site of the accident and put a military hospital on alert after neighbouring Luxembourg requested help.

Luxair said the plane had been in service since 1991.

"Luxair deeply regrets having to confirm that flight LG9642/LH2420 coming from Berlin-Tempelhof to Luxembourg was involved this morning in an accident at Niederanven," the airline said in a statement.

srs what? 6th Nov 2002 09:54

Last report is at least 16 dead.

Click Here - BBC News

Massey1Bravo 6th Nov 2002 09:59

Just got the news from CNN on TV. 13 killed including crew but 6 pax survived. a/c presumably crashed in thick fog.

BBC says there are 22 on board and 16 of them were killed.

CPilotUK 6th Nov 2002 10:03

I'm watching it right now on Sky News.

So far, 17 people have lost their lives. Very sad.

My condolences to the family of the deceased.:(

CR2 6th Nov 2002 10:08

Lux Govt just confirmed 16 out of 22 on board did not survive. They mentioned crash site as 6nm from airport.

LX-LGB Fokker 50 (c/n 20221)


Found this link in Luxembourgish

RTL.LU

Sensible Garage 6th Nov 2002 10:10

very sad
 
sorry, in German

Tote bei Fokker-Absturz Lininenmaschine der Luxair kam aus Berlin und hatte 22 Menschen an Bord

(rar, 12.30 Uhr) - Eine Fokker 50 der Luxair ist am Mittwoch morgen kurz nach 10 Uhr zwischen Niederanven und Roodt-Syr abgestürzt. Die Linienmaschine der Luxair hatte 19 Passagiere und drei Besatzungsmitglieder an Bord. Nach Polizeiangaben gibt es Tote. Das Flugzeug kam aus Berlin und befand sich im Landeanflug auf den Flughafen Findel. Warum die Maschine abstürzte, ist noch unklar. Zur Unglückszeit herrschte dichter Nebel um die Hauptstadt. Starke Rettungsmannschaften von Protection Civile, Feuerwehr und Polzei sind am Unglücksort im Einsatz. Nach ersten Berichten von Unglücksort ist die Maschine fast vollständig zerstört worden, das Cockpit sei jedoch intakt geblieben. Es gebe Rauch, jedoch kein Feuer. Die Luxair-Direktion will um 12 Uhr über das Unglück und den Stand der Rettungsaktion informieren.

Buster Hyman 6th Nov 2002 11:29

Sincere condolences to all concerned.

Dash8100 6th Nov 2002 12:24

If you look at the pictures, it seems the propeller is not very damaged. Could this mean that it wasn't turning at the impact (shut down or failed, contributing to the accident?) Speculating, I know... Does anybody know what may have caused the crash?

PropsAreForBoats 6th Nov 2002 12:51

Does anyone know the nationality of the crew?

Flypuppy 6th Nov 2002 12:57

It is being reported that one of the flight crew is the son of the Luxair Chief Pilot.

Localiser Green 6th Nov 2002 13:09

The Captain of the F50 was apparently the son of the Luxair CP.

Danou_71 6th Nov 2002 14:08

A friend of mine was landing just before them. The WX was RVR24: 250m and they had contact with the RWY at the 50' minimums for the Saab 2000. According him the last transmissions were:

LG9642: We are established on ILS 24
ATC: Ok you're n°2 continue APP, latest RVR 250m.
LG9642: We need 300m for LDG...

About 1 minute later:

ATC: LG9642, you're clear to land 24.

That was not aknowledged by LG 9642 and afterwards the TWR call them several times without succes and shortly after the airport was closed:(...

My condolences to all concerned.

Question; are the F-50 and Luxair crew cat 3 approved?

CR2 6th Nov 2002 14:26

Just been a press conference.
Cat II conditions, a/c & crew Cat II.
They mentioned there are now 18 dead, 2 critical in hospital and 2 unaccounted for/missing.

outback aviator 6th Nov 2002 15:41

:( I flew for Luxair when they had just begun to operate the F-50
and found them a great bunch to work with and very professional.
All the crew were good people, cannot imagine what went wrong.

My sincere and heartfelt condolences to all concerned.:confused:

cwatters 6th Nov 2002 17:25

Saw report on BBC that the plane site was not "in line with the runway" eg offset to one side some distance. Not sure how reliable that is.

Oldjet Jockey 6th Nov 2002 17:36

Luxembourg crash
 
I know the area of the crash site as I live in Luxembourg. The road that they scraped across is in line with or closely parallel to the final approach path. I notice from pictures that the aircraft crossed the road at about 45%. This would be consistent with the failure of the starboard engine causing a vere to the right at a stage when the pilots were probably in full imc. I agree that the conditions of the starboard prop seems consistent with striking the ground while not under power. Of course no more than speculation and i'm sure the black boxes will soon provide the investigating team with the real state of the engines. Although the pictures from the rear were not all that clear I could not see extended flaps. Has any one any better views of this?

Flash2001 6th Nov 2002 18:11

I just saw photos on CNN. Couldn't see props. Cockpit area did not look severely damaged. Rest of aircraft destroyed.

D**n

Brookmans Park 6th Nov 2002 18:36

luxembourg crash
 
Just a thought
do we know if the a/c had been holding prior to the approach
the idea of a fuel starved engine failure would account for the course deviation maybe?
I realise that there was a post crash fire but a little fuel goes a long way in crash

BeePee 6th Nov 2002 19:42

:mad:
I live only a few miles from the crash site, about right at the FAF 24. At the time I was on the phone so I didn’t hear it pass by but my mailman told me that he heard it pass by “making a funny noise”. Of course such a “layman observation” could mean a lot of things but obviously something was already going wrong.

The aircraft crashed about half a mile right of track with a considerable off-track heading (45 to 60º). From the pictures it is clear that the right prop isn’t damaged much suggesting its engine wasn’t running at the time.

From a point of view of topography the airport is about 500-600ft above the level where I live and a good 400ft above the crash site. Also the airport was fogged in but at my place was about 400ft ceiling with a visibility of about 2 miles. This suggests that the crew could have been VMC in the very final stages of the flight.

Thus far for the facts – the rest is pure speculation at this stage. However, there are wild rumors going around already.

- The aircraft just came out of a service and rumor has it that the right engine had been changed;
- Luxair will resume operations tomorrow but only “experienced” pilot will be allowed to fly;
- All the local political dignitaries were having a “field day” and Mr. H. Grethen, Minister of Transport and Economy was once again making a fool of himself.

Rumor has it that Mr. Grethen has more expertise regarding alcoholic beverages than his about his functions. Well I personally don’t know about his drinking habits but a can confirm his poor judgment regarding aviation from first hand experience. Since he became minister back in 1999 the civil aviation scene in Luxembourg has been in permanent state of crisis.

So far many forces try to “unseat” Mr. Henri Klein, the director of the DACL (Direction de l’Aviation Civile de Luxembourg = the Luxembourg CAA), as a consequence of his minister’s decisions. And to name the account of such decisions and scandals would go far beyond this sad story. Let me just say as much as since Minister Grethen has taken over the DACL is forced to “police” their airlines in the worst possible way.

As a result communications and collaboration between authority and airlines have gone done here in Luxembourg which took its toll and training standards, maintenance quality, etc are going downhill. I fear that today’s sad accident may be the result.

In my opinion, and whatever the accident investigations reveals as primary cause, the JAA should take a very close look at Luxembourg. The time where airlines and crews have to fear their authority should be over and even in Luxembourg the industry and the authority should team up to improve safety.

In Luxembourg pressure is already rising that “heads must roll”. I sincerely hope that it will be Henri Grethen and not Henri Klein. Otherwise, the DACL will lose its most competent member.

So, without knowing the cause of this accident yet a lot of problems within the country’s aviation industry are finally coming to light. I hope that this sad day will be the turn around for Luxembourg.
:mad:

BeePee

King Kee 6th Nov 2002 19:50

Condolences to all. Used to have a lot of involvement with LUX and LG in particular, though on the handling side so do not know flight crew.

I may be in totally the wrong area, but I know on one of the approaches to LUX, if slightly too steep before capturing the glide, you often used to get a 'spurious' GPWS warning due to hills in the area, even though your turn to capture the ILS avoided these. As I said, I may be totally in the wrong area, and the comments above regarding the 'stationery' prop may point to other causes, but could CFIT be an issue?

CR2 7th Nov 2002 06:20

Reports now say 20 of the 22 people on board didn't make it. One pax survived after being "catapulted" (reporter's words) out of the aircraft when it crashed. One of the pilots also survived.
Was just wondering if that off-track condition could have been because he was heading to DIK for another approach?

HEATHROW DIRECTOR 7th Nov 2002 07:10

Lots of sorrow... lots of questions. As a controller my immediate reaction was "how could it crash 5km (6m in one quote) from touchdown simply because of fog?" Mode C should have been visible to ATC and no controller is going to allow an a/c to descend to ground level without doing something. I therefore suspect a major control problem, but who knows - yet?

I do get very distressed at the media - BBC, papers, etc., implying that fog was a major cause. A/c land in thick fog day after day with no hassle.

CR2 7th Nov 2002 07:22

Don't know if this is relevant, but I'm sure the authorities will be checking; this flight was the second flight after it's 220Hr maintenance check - first flight being the outbound to Berlin early in the morning.

EDDNHopper 7th Nov 2002 07:59

Some reports give bird strike as a _possible_ cause. Huge flocks of migrating birds in the vicinity at time of impact.

bluskis 7th Nov 2002 08:12

Does anyone know if birds fly in cloud/fog?

EDDNHopper 7th Nov 2002 08:43

bluskis,

I wondered myself, and after a very quick search found a (what seems to me reliable) source stating reported deaths of 1000s of migrating birds in fog.

http://www.darksky.ch/texte/sempach.pdf
(in German)

Birds do fly during fog. They are obviously being attracted by strong sources of light during fog, especially at night - collisions of flocks of birds with light houses etc. are common, according to that source.

Arkroyal 7th Nov 2002 09:06

Of all the possible causes, and I am not one to speculate, Brookmans Park's takes the cake.

Would you like to pop over to Luxembourg and convene a kangaroo court for the surviving pilot too?

:mad:

Dash8100 7th Nov 2002 09:47

Just saw a big picture of the Fokker 50 from behind. Badly "flattened". Definitely no flaps extended, and the right propeller seemed undamaged, not feathered. The left propeller destroyed, it seems. Could the "flattened" wreckige suggest little forward motion at the moment of impact? A stall, or spin? Just thoughts. The plane had apparently (according to a newspaper) just left a holdingpattern, heading for the airport. (I'm not a pilot, obviously). I guess the two survivors were very lucky. The captain will surely end all speculations, when he can be questioned.

HEATHROW DIRECTOR 7th Nov 2002 10:46

Following my posting I received an irate private mail from a pilot who had taken umbrage at my post because I mentioned "control problem". He viewed this as some sort of criticism of the crew! How anyone could jump to such a conclusion is totally beyond me but let me emphasise that nothing was further from my mind. By "control problem" I meant that perhaps there was a malfunction preventing control of the aeroplane and this seems to be backed up by other postings on here.

Bearcat 7th Nov 2002 10:59

Am I correct in saying that the auto feather function is not operative on approach and only available for T/O? I cant remeber but I do recall an eng fail on my days on the FK on approach was a pig to handle.

My sympathies to all.
Bear

Nick Figaretto 7th Nov 2002 11:31

A/F on an F50 is inhibited in descent, as the power levers must be in T/O detent for A/F to be armed. When experiencing an engine failure during approach, the propeller will not autofeather when initiating a G/A because of this.

JR_wilco 7th Nov 2002 11:33

have found added some arr charts for ELLX rwy 24



berkut 7th Nov 2002 13:21

Autofeather
 
Hello guys

U have talking about autofeather function of the Prop during approach.

I don't know the Fokker 50. In the Aeroplane I fly (Saab 2000), this function is fully operational during all phases of flight.

If somebody has other infos about the Fokker I would highly apprechiate any comments. ;)


----------------------------------------------------------------------------------


My deeply condolences to all people concerned.

Backoffice 7th Nov 2002 14:45

Has anyone noticed the left hand elevator is completely missing
whereas the right hand one is still attached ???
Hard to see how the inpact forces would have done that.
Anyone know where it is ??

RatherBeFlying 7th Nov 2002 14:54

Don't know the F50 either, but in the Viscount autofeather was dependent on throttle position such that an engine could flame out or have the fuel shut off but would not autofeather until throttle advanced into takeoff/climb range -- at least that's how it worked in the simulator.

Oldjet Jockey 7th Nov 2002 15:09

Luxembourg ceash
 
Two photographs in the Luxembourg press show the right tailplane and elevator almost intact. On the left side the tailplane appears to have been boken by impact damage at about mid point. the outer half together with parts of the elevator seem to have been twisted underneath and lie still partly attached to the inner part of the tail plane. The aircraft's wheels initially touched in a field about two meters before the road. After crossing the road the aircraft struck an embankment rising about two meters above the road and planted with trees and bushes. It is likely that the left tailplane was damaged by contact with the embankment or the trees. An arial view taken from a helicopter makes this clear.


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