TransAsia Airways Flight 791

TransAsia Airways Flight 791[1][2] was a regular cargo flight between Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport and Macau International Airport. At 01:52 AM local time on 21 December 2002, the ATR 72 operating the flight crashed into the sea 17 kilometres (11 mi; 9.2 nmi) southwest of Magong, Penghu, Taiwan. The two crew members on board were killed.[3][4]

TransAsia Airways Flight 791
The aircraft involved in the accident in July 2001, while still in service with Gill Airways
Accident
Date21 December 2002 (2002-12-21)
SummaryAtmospheric icing and pilot error leading to loss of control
Site17 kilometres (11 mi; 9.2 nmi) southwest of Magong, Penghu, Taiwan
Aircraft
Aircraft typeATR 72-202
OperatorTransAsia Airways
IATA flight No.GE791
ICAO flight No.TNA791
Call signTRANSASIA 791
RegistrationB-22708
Flight originChiang Kai Shek International Airport (now Taoyuan International Airport), Taipei, Taiwan
DestinationMacau International Airport, Macau
Occupants2
Passengers0
Crew2
Fatalities2
Missing2
Survivors0

Accident

Flight GE791 was operated using an ATR 72-200 freighter. The captain and first officer were the only occupants of the aircraft.,The flight was from Chiang Kai Shek International Airport (now Taoyuan International Airport) to Macau International Airport.

Flight 791 departed from Taoyuan at 1:04 AM local time (17:04 UTC). At 1:51 AM, the first officer requested permission from Air Traffic Control (ATC) to descend from flight level (FL) 180 (18,000 feet (5,500 m)) to FL160 (16,000 feet (4,900 m)). The controller approved the request and the first officer acknowledged. However, the aircraft began a rapid descent and disappeared from the radar screens one minute later, at 01:52 AM. The last known position of the aircraft was about 17 kilometres (11 mi; 9.2 nmi) southwest of Phengu, Magong.

At 03:05 AM, the Civil Aeronautics Administration of the Ministry of Communications of Taiwan declared an emergency and dispatched helicopters and boats of the Air Force, Navy and Coast Guard Administration to search for Flight 791.

At 08:05 one of the rescue boats found the first pieces of debris and subsequently confirmed that Flight 791 had crashed. It is not known if the bodies of the flight crew were recovered. The captain was presumed dead by a court.[1]:i,2

Aircraft and crew

The aircraft involved was an ATR 72-200 (registration B-22708, manufacturing serial number 322). It entered service as a passenger aircraft with TransAsia Airways on 25 August 1992.[5][6]

From September 1998 to February 2001, the aircraft was leased to Gill Airways in the United Kingdom with British registration G-BXYV. After returning to TransAsia Airways in 2001, the aircraft was converted into a freighter and was given its previous registration back as B-22708.

At the time of the accident, the aircraft had 19,254 hours, and 25,529 takeoff and landing cycles. The aircraft was powered by two Pratt and Whitney PW124B engines.[1]:9

The captain, age 53, had been with TransAsia Airways since 1991. He had 14,277 hours of flight experience, including 10,608 hours on the ATR 42/72. The first officer, age 34, had been with TransAsia Airways since 1997 and had logged 4,578 flight hours, with 4,271 of them on the ATR 42/72.[1]:4

Investigation

Taiwan's Aviation Safety Council (now the Taiwan Transportation Safety Board) investigated the accident.[1] The ASC reviewed the flight crew's training records. During recurrent training, the captain had "satisfactory" scores in icing conditions, however the instructor noted that the captain had a "tendency to lose situational awareness". According to his instructor, the captain repeated the training, and his results improved. Despite this, the instructor said that the captain was "still unsteady." There were no issues reported during the first officer's training.[1]:5–6

Salvage and recovery

The majority of the wreckage was found 180 metres (590 ft) away from where Flight 791 last made contact with ATC.[1]:107 On 9 January 2003, the ASC commenced a salvage operation assisted by the coast guard administration and TransAsia Airways staff. The first salvage operation was performed on 10 January, after being delayed due to weather. The flight data recorder (FDR) was recovered on 11 January, and the cockpit voice recorder (CVR) was recovered on 14 January.[1]:107–123

Examination of wreckage

Investigators discovered ice accumulation around the aircraft's major components. The aircraft's de-icing system was examined as well.[1]

Analysis of the flight recorders

The CVR recorded a large amount of non-pertinent conversation. The first indication of any problem occurred at 1:34 AM, when a "single chime" caution was heard. The captain then explained about how ice was accumulating on the aircraft at 1:44. The captain then brought this up a second time at 1:50. The crew then requested their descent. A short non-pertinent conversation was then heard, after which several alarms sounded until the end of the recording.[1]:45–47

The FDR indicated that the autopilot was disengaged at the moment of impact. The anti-ice system had been activated twice. The first was from 1:34 to 1:37, and the second was from 1:41 until the accident.[1]:45–47

Sequence of events based on recorder analysis

Flight 791 was normal until 1:34 AM with the "single chime" alert going off. At 1:44 the captain said, "It’s iced up quite a huge chunk," and then four minutes later shouted, "Wow it’s a huge chunk," to which the first officer responded "what an ice," followed by, "this speed is getting slower it was a hundred two hundred one hundred and ninety now one hundred seventy." The captain expressed concern to the first officer about the pitot-static system getting blocked but he did not express the concern of the aircraft stalling. He also requested that they should descend as a precaution. After the first officer requested and obtained clearance to descend by ATC, the captain again said that there was ice accumulating on the aircraft. The stick shaker then activated, followed by the aural stall warning. The autopilot was disengaged in an attempt to recover the aircraft, which had entered an aerodynamic stall. The attempt was unsuccessful and the aircraft rapidly lost altitude and crashed into the Ocean, killing the crew.[1]:135–140[4]

Conclusion

The Aviation Safety Council released its final report on 25 October 2003. The report determined that the flight crew had lacked situational awareness and thus did not respond to the severe icing conditions.[1]:i–v,178–184

FINDINGS RELATED TO PROBABLE CAUSES:

  1. The accident flight encountered severe icing conditions. The liquid water content and maximum droplet size were beyond the icing certification envelope of FAR/JAR 25 [located in] appendix C.
  2. TNA's training and rating of aircraft severe icing for this pilots has not been effective and the pilots have not developed a familiarity with the note, CAUTION and WARNING set forth in Flight Crew Operating Manual and Airplane Flight Manual to adequately perform their duties.
  3. After the flight crew detected icing condition and the airframe de-icing system was activated twice, the flight crew did not read the relative handbook, thereby the procedure was not able to inform the flight crew and to remind them of "be alert to severe icing detection".
  4. The "unexpected decrease in speed" indicated by the airspeed indicator is an indication of severe icing [conditions encountered by the aircraft].
  5. The flight crew did not respond to the severe Icing conditions with pertinent alertness and situation[al] awareness that the aircraft might have encountered conditions which was "outside that for which the aircraft was certificated and might seriously degrade the performance and controllability of the aircraft".
  6. The flight crew was too late in detecting the severe icing conditions. After detection, they did not change altitude immediately, nor take other steps required in the Severe Icing Emergency Procedures.
  7. The aircraft was in an "unusual or uncontrolled rolling and pitching" state, and a stall occurred thereafter.
  8. After the aircraft had developed a stall and an abnormal attitude, the recovery maneuvering did not comply with the operating procedures and techniques for Recovery of Unusual Attitudes. The performance and controllability of the aircraft may have been seriously degraded by then. It cannot be confirmed whether [or not] the unusual attitudes of the aircraft could have been recovered if the crew's operation had complied with the relevant procedures and techniques.
  9. During the first 25 minutes, the extra drag increased about 100 counts, inducing a speed diminishing about 10 knots.
  10. During the [time that the] airframe de-icing system was intermittently switched off, it is highly probable that residual ice [accumulated and] covered on the wings of the aircraft.
  11. Four minutes prior to [the] autopilot [being] disengaged, the extra drag increased about 500 counts, and [the] airspeed decayed to 158 knots, and lift-drag ratio loss about 64% rapidly.
  12. During the 10s [seconds] before the roll upset, the longitudinal and lateral stability [of the aircraft] has been modified by the severe ice accumulated on the wings producing the flow separation. Before [the] autopilot disengaged, the aerodynamic of the aircraft (lift/drag) was degraded of about 40%.

— ASC final report[1]:i–v,178–184

See also

References

  1. "Inflight icing encounter and crash into the sea, TransAsia Airways Flight 791, ATR72-200, B-22708, 17 kilometers Southwest of Makung City, Phengu Islands, Taiwan, December 21, 2002" (PDF). Aviation Occurrence Report. Taipei, Taiwan: Aviation Safety Council. 1. 25 October 2003. ASC-AOR-05-04-001. Retrieved 25 May 2019.
  2. "CI611與GE791失事殘骸偵搜打撈作業比較" [Comparison of CI611 and GE791 wreckage and reconnaissance] (PDF) (in Chinese). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 March 2014.
  3. "Investigation page (with links to the report and appendices)". Aviation Safety Council. Archived from the original on 22 March 2014. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  4. Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident ATR 72-202 B-22708 Makung City, Penghu Islands". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 25 May 2019.
  5. "B-22708 TransAsia Airways ATR 72". www.planespotters.net. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
  6. "Transasia Airways B-22708 (ATR 42/72 - MSN 322) (Ex G-BXYV)". www.airfleets.net. Airfleets aviation. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
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