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Turkish Airlines plane crashes at Schiphol airport



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Asif
PostPosted: Feb 25, 2009 - 03:10 PM Reply with quote Back to top
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The Telegraph wrote:

Turkish Airlines plane crashes at Schiphol airport, Amsterdam: at least nine dead

At least nine people were killed and 25 injured when a Turkish Airlines plane crashed on landing at Amsterdam's Schiphol international airport on Wednesday.

By Peter Allen in Paris and Amberin Zaman in Istanbul
Last Updated: 1:08PM GMT 25 Feb 2009

The plane, with 135 people on board, crashed in a field near a motorway and broke into three pieces.

Initial reports said 50 passengers had been evacuated from the wreckage. There was also early speculation that one person had died, but Turkish officials and airline spokesmen later said that all of the passengers had survived.

The Turkish Airlines 737-800, left Istanbul's Ataturk Airport at 8.22 am (0622 GMT) bound for Amsterdam with 127 passengers, including a baby, and seven crew members on board.

According to eyewitnesses, Turkish Airlines Flight 1951 landed at "massive speed" in a field by the A9 motorway, missing the runway at Amsterdam Schipol Airport, one of the busiest in Europe, by more than three miles.

It was not on fire, but "definitely broken in three", one witness said.

Dutch television images showed police and rescue workers swarming around the wreckage and ambulances rushing to and from the scene. Both of the plane's engines were torn off and lay around 100 yards (100 meters) from the remains of the fuselage.

There was no sign the plane had caught fire after the crash.

There was no immediate word on what caused the crash, which happened in slightly misty weather with little wind.

Wim Kok, a spokesman for the Dutch anti-terror coordinator's office, said terrorism did not appear to be a factor.

"There are no indications whatsoever (of a terror attack)," Mr Kok said.

During its 75 year history, Turkish Airlines has had three major accidents on its international flights, and 18 on domestic flights.

There have also been serious accidents at Schipol airport, which handles more than 47 million passengers a year.

The most recent was in 1994 when a KLM flight to Cardiff had to return to the airport, and crash landed. Three on board died, including the captain, and there were nine injuries.

In terms of passenger numbers, Schipol is the fifth biggest airport in Europe behind London, Paris, Frankfurt and Madrid.

source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldne ... -dead.html

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Asif
PostPosted: Feb 25, 2009 - 03:55 PM Reply with quote Back to top
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BBC wrote:

Turkish plane crash in Amsterdam

A Turkish Airlines plane has crashed on landing at Amsterdam's Schiphol international airport, killing nine people and injuring more than 50.

The plane, with 128 passengers and seven crew, crashed short of the runway near the A9 highway. It broke into three pieces, but did not catch fire.

Witnesses spoke of seeing at least 20 passengers walking from the wreckage of Flight 1951.

Officials said it was unclear why the plane, en route from Istanbul, crashed.

There were conflicting reports initially about the number of dead, but at a press conference at Schiphol a couple of hours after the crash, the airport director confirmed that nine people had died.

The incident happened at 1031 local time (0931 GMT).

Michel Bezuijen, mayor of the Haarlemmermeer municipality under which Schiphol airport falls, said 25 of those hurt were seriously injured.

They included both passengers and crew, he told a news conference.

Candan Karlitekin, head of Turkish Airlines' board of directors, told reporters in Turkey that visibility had been good at the time of landing.

"We have checked the plane's documents and there is no problem concerning maintenance," he is quoted as saying by the Associated Press news agency.

One passenger aboard the plane, Kerem Uzel, told Turkish news channel NTV that the plane's landing had been announced when they were at an altitude of 600m (2,000ft).

"We suddenly descended a great distance as if the plane fell into turbulence. The plane's tail hit the ground... It slid from the side of the motorway into the field."

White sheets

Schiphol Airport spokesman Rudd Wecer earlier told BBC News that the plane came down a couple of hundred metres short of a runway, in normal weather conditions.

Emergency services reached the site quickly, he added.

Television footage showed rescue workers laying out white sheets on what appeared to be bodies.

The injured people were being taken to Spaarne hospital, in Haarlem, close to the airport, while relatives of passengers were assembled in a sports hall at a nearby village.

Thomas Freidhoff, a student who was cycling past the scene, told BBC News he had seen the plane appearing to glide through the air, having lost all propulsion, before hitting the ground.

"The plane was nose up and the tail section was at a 45-degree angle. The tail section broke down first, which broke off," he said.

"And seconds after the crash people started exiting through the tail section...

"I saw dozens of people making it out very quickly, and as I was about to dial 911 the first sirens were noticeable, and within five minutes there were 10 or 15 ambulances."

A witness who was driving past the airport moments after the crash told BBC News he saw the plane lying in a field just 60m from the A9 motorway, surrounded by large clouds of brown dust and grey smoke.

"I saw the plane lying there in three pieces," said Nikolai van der Smagt, who works for a telecom company near Schiphol airport.

"The first people were just getting off the plane and they looked confused. There was a lot a dust, but no fire."

'Lot of sirens'

Resident Jonathan Nip described the scene: "What I'm seeing now is the whole of the aeroplane - without any wings or front or rear end - is lying in the field and there are about 50 ambulances, a lot of fire trucks, a couple of helicopters, emergency helicopters, a lot of police, a lot of sirens.

"The highway which is running next to the crash site is closed right now because of the traffic that has stopped to watch the crash."

All flights were suspended, but the airport has since re-opened.

The Boeing 737-800 aircraft left Istanbul's Ataturk Airport at 0822 (0622 GMT).

The last crash involving a Turkish Airlines plane was in 2003 when at least 65 people died in an accident in eastern Turkey.

Schiphol airport has six runways and one major passenger terminal. In 2007, it handled 47 million passengers, ranking fifth in Europe.

source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/7909683.stm

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r2d2
PostPosted: Mar 06, 2009 - 12:24 AM Reply with quote Back to top
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First of all, I'm sorry for all who passed-away in this accident.

Below is a link from an Aviation Week article about the first findings of the crash investigation:
http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/generic/ ... annel=comm



Quote:
At that point, the radio altimeter readout on the captain's (left) side suddenly switched to -8 feet.

Question: How can a radio-altimeter read negative values? OR is -8 feet a difference between the two radio-altimeters' readings?
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outlaw162
PostPosted: Mar 06, 2009 - 01:17 AM Reply with quote Back to top
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It is calibrated to display "zero" in the landing attitude (nose high) when the main gear touches down, but the antenna is forward of the main gear, between the mains and the nose gear, so as the nose gear comes down the displayed value turns negative as the antenna continues to descend during de-rotation.

It normally reads -4 sitting static on the ground.

OL
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r2d2
PostPosted: Mar 06, 2009 - 04:53 PM Reply with quote Back to top
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Thank you, outlaw, for the explanation.
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