Aeroservicios Ecuatorianos Flight 767-103

Aeroservicios Ecuatorianos Flight 767-103

A DC-8 similar to the accident aircraft
Accident summary
Date 18 September 1984 (1984-09-18)
Summary Failed to take-off
Site Quito, Ecuador
Crew 4
Fatalities 53 (included 49 on the ground)
Survivors 0
Aircraft type Douglas DC-8-55F
Operator Aeroservicios Ecuatorianos (AECA)
Registration HC-BKN
Flight origin Miami International Airport, Florida, United States
Stopover Quito Airport, Quito, Ecuador
Destination Simón Bolívar International Airport, Guayaquil, Ecuador

Aeroservicios Ecuatorianos Flight 767-103 was a scheduled freight flight from Miami in the United States to Guayaquil, Ecuador with an intermediate stop in the Ecuadorian capital Quito. On 18 September 1984 the flight was being operated by a Douglas DC-8-55F jet (registered in Ecuador as HC-BKN).[1][2][3] It failed to get airborne during the takeoff run at Quito Airport, hit an Instrument Landing System (ILS) antenna at the end of the runway and then struck several houses.[2] All four crew and 49 people on the ground were killed.[2]

Investigation

An investigation concluded that the crew failed to notice that the horizontal stabiliser was set at 0.5 degrees nose up when it should have been 8 degrees nose up, this increased the time and distance needed by the aircraft to rotate and the conclusion was the aircraft did not have enough runway length to get airborne.[2] A number of contributory factors were also involved:

The investigation made eight safety recommendations.[2]

Aftermath

The President of Ecuador declared three days of national mourning.[3]

Aircraft

The aircraft was a Douglas DC-8-55F four-engined jet cargo transport that had been built in United States in 1965.[1] First delivered to Trans International Airlines on 18 May 1965 it was bought by Aeroservicios Ecuatorianos in August 1983.[1]

References

Citations
  1. 1 2 3 Roach/Eastwood 1992, p. 348
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Civil Aviation Authority 1974, p. 20/82
  3. 1 2 "Quito plane crash kills 50." Times [London, England] 20 Sept. 1984: 5. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 19 Dec. 2013.
Bibliography
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