1981 Zheleznogorsk mid-air collision

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Date18 September 1981
SummaryMid-air collision resulting from ATC error
Site
Total fatalities40
1981 Zheleznogorsk mid-air collision
Accident
Date18 September 1981
SummaryMid-air collision resulting from ATC error
Site
Total fatalities40
Total survivors0
First aircraft

An Aeroflot Yakovlev Yak-40, similar to the aircraft involved in the accident.
TypeYakovlev Yak-40
OperatorAeroflot
RegistrationCCCP-87455
Flight originIrkutsk Airport (IKT/UIII), Soviet Union
DestinationZheleznogorsk-Ilimskiy Airport (UIBV), Soviet Union
Passengers29
Crew4
Survivors0
Second aircraft

An Aeroflot Mil Mi-8, similar to the aircraft involved in the accident.
TypeMil Mi-8T
OperatorAeroflot
RegistrationCCCP-22268
Flight originBratsk Airport (UIBB), Soviet Union
DestinationZheleznogorsk-Ilimskiy Airport (UIBV), Soviet Union
Crew7
Survivors0

The 1981 Zheleznogorsk mid-air collision was an accident involving a Yakovlev Yak-40 jet and a Mil Mi-8T helicopter, both operated by the Russian airline Aeroflot, 11 km (6.9 miles) east of Zheleznogorsk-Ilimskiy Airport, Soviet Union, on 18 September 1981. None of the combined 40 passengers and crew on either aircraft survived.[1]

While flight V-652 was inbound to Zheleznogorsk-Ilimskiy after its flight from Irkutsk on 18 September 1981, a Mil Mi-8T helicopter was also heading for the same airport after having finished its training flight from Bratsk. The crew of flight V-652 initiated their descent to the airport and had to pass through clouds while searching for the runway. When the plane was about 11 km (6.9 miles) East of the airport and at an altitude of 1,300 ft (396 m), it collided with the helicopter who was also descending at 7.13am. Flight V-652 suffered immense damage to its left wing, fuselage and tail section, while the helicopter's main rotor and cockpit were destroyed with serious damage to its fuselage as well.[2] Both aircraft nosedived towards the ground following the collision, and crashed in a wooded hilly terrain 400 meters (1,300 feet) from one another. None of the 29 passengers and 4 crew aboard flight V-652 survived the crash, and all 7 crew on board the Mil Mi-8T helicopter also perished in the disaster.[3]

Aircraft

Aftermath

References

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