SANSA Flight 32

1990 aviation accident From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

SANSA Flight 32, a CASA C-212 Aviocar on its way to Palmar Sur Airport crashed into the Cerro Cedral, a mountain in Costa Rica after takeoff from Juan Santamaría International Airport in San Jose on January 15, 1990. All 20 passengers and 3 crew on board died in the crash.

DateJanuary 15, 1990
Site
AircrafttypeCASA C-212 Aviocar
Quick facts Accident, Date ...
SANSA Flight 32
A CASA/IPTN NC-212 similar to the accident aircraft
Accident
DateJanuary 15, 1990
SummaryControlled flight into terrain, pilot error
Site
Aircraft
Aircraft typeCASA C-212 Aviocar
OperatorSANSA
RegistrationTI-SAB
Flight originJuan Santamaría International Airport
DestinationPalmar Sur Airport
Occupants23
Passengers20
Crew3
Fatalities23
Survivors0
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Accident sequence

SANSA Flight 32 took off from Juan Santamaria International Airport at 08:25 local time and was cleared to climb to 5500 feet. Soon after the crew received another instruction to climb to 8500 feet. Midway through the climb, the aircraft flew into Cerro Cedral at 7200 feet, killing all on board.[1]

Investigation

The investigation found that the main cause of the accident was the failure to comply with the proposed flight plan discussed with air traffic control, which would have led the aircraft to be flying under IMC conditions instead of VFR ones. Supporting factors include the lack of a Ground Proximity Warning System, pilot fatigue and a lack of a flight safety program in SANSA.[2]

References

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