List of accidents and incidents involving the Lockheed C-130 Hercules: Difference between revisions

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now up-to-date through January 1985
24 February 1985 - Saudi KC-130H 1620, c.n. 4872, cr. at Riyadh, stall after bad landing attempt
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* {{flagicon|United States}}'''[[December 29]] [[1984]]:''' L-100 c.n. 4101, first flown [[September 17]], [[1965]], leased to [[Continental Air Services]], N9260R, September [[1965]], then sold to the [[Government of the Republic of Zambia]], registered 9J-RCV, August [[1966]]. Leased to [[Zambian Air Cargoes]], August [[1966]], then sold to [[National Aircraft Leasing]], registered N920NA, March [[1969]], in an FAA series usually reserved for aircraft of the [[National Aeronautics and Space Administration]], same January [[1977]]. Leased to [[Alaska Airlines]], April [[1969]]. Leased to [[Saturn Airways]], N24ST, June [[1972]], modified to L-100-30, November [[1972]]. Leased to [[TIA]], December [[1976]], port wing and engines damaged in explosion, May [[1977]], repaired; sold to [[TIA]], April [[1979]]. To [[Transamerica]], October [[1979]] - destroyed on ground at [[Cafunfo]], [[Angola]] during [[UNITA]] guerrilla attack.
* {{flagicon|United States}}'''[[December 29]] [[1984]]:''' L-100 c.n. 4101, first flown [[September 17]], [[1965]], leased to [[Continental Air Services]], N9260R, September [[1965]], then sold to the [[Government of the Republic of Zambia]], registered 9J-RCV, August [[1966]]. Leased to [[Zambian Air Cargoes]], August [[1966]], then sold to [[National Aircraft Leasing]], registered N920NA, March [[1969]], in an FAA series usually reserved for aircraft of the [[National Aeronautics and Space Administration]], same January [[1977]]. Leased to [[Alaska Airlines]], April [[1969]]. Leased to [[Saturn Airways]], N24ST, June [[1972]], modified to L-100-30, November [[1972]]. Leased to [[TIA]], December [[1976]], port wing and engines damaged in explosion, May [[1977]], repaired; sold to [[TIA]], April [[1979]]. To [[Transamerica]], October [[1979]] - destroyed on ground at [[Cafunfo]], [[Angola]] during [[UNITA]] guerrilla attack.
* [[Image:USAF_roundel.svg|25px|USAF Roundel]]'''[[January 22]] [[1985]]:''' A USAF C-130A 56-0501, c.n. 3109, of the 95th Tactical Airlift Squadron, crashed in the sea during visual approach to [[Trujillo Airport]], [[Honduras]].
* [[Image:USAF_roundel.svg|25px|USAF Roundel]]'''[[January 22]] [[1985]]:''' A USAF C-130A 56-0501, c.n. 3109, of the 95th Tactical Airlift Squadron, crashed in the sea during visual approach to [[Trujillo Airport]], [[Honduras]].
*[[Image:Roundel of the Royal Saudi Air Force.svg|15px]]'''[[February 24]] [[1985]]:''' [[Royal Saudi Air Force]] KC-130H 1620, c.n. 4872, of 16 Squadron, crashed at [[Riyadh]], [[Saudi Arabia]], stalled in overshoot turn.
* [[Image:RCAF-Roundel.svg |15px|RCAF Roundel]]'''[[March 29]] [[1985]]:''' Two Canadian Forces CC-130H, 130330, c.n. 4555, and 130331, c.n. 4559, both of 435th Squadron, crashed after having a mid-air collision over CFB Namao, near Edmonton, Alberta.<ref>[http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19850329-0&lang=en Aviation Safety Network]</ref><ref>[http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19850329-1&lang=en Aviation Safety Network]</ref>
* [[Image:RCAF-Roundel.svg |15px|RCAF Roundel]]'''[[March 29]] [[1985]]:''' Two Canadian Forces CC-130H, 130330, c.n. 4555, and 130331, c.n. 4559, both of 435th Squadron, crashed after having a mid-air collision over CFB Namao, near Edmonton, Alberta.<ref>[http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19850329-0&lang=en Aviation Safety Network]</ref><ref>[http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19850329-1&lang=en Aviation Safety Network]</ref>
* [[Image:USAF_roundel.svg|25px|USAF Roundel]]'''[[July 1]] [[1987]]:''' A USAF C-130E, 68-10945, c.n. 4325, crashed during a military exercise at [[Fort Bragg, North Carolina|Fort Bragg]], narrowly missing spectators seconds before it crashed and burned, killing four crewmen as well as a soldier on the ground. Two other crewmen were injured. The plane was displaying a low level airdrop technique in which a parachute is used to pull a tank out the rear cargo door while the plane is a few feet above the ground, known as [[LAPES]] (Low Altitude Parachute Extraction System).
* [[Image:USAF_roundel.svg|25px|USAF Roundel]]'''[[July 1]] [[1987]]:''' A USAF C-130E, 68-10945, c.n. 4325, crashed during a military exercise at [[Fort Bragg, North Carolina|Fort Bragg]], narrowly missing spectators seconds before it crashed and burned, killing four crewmen as well as a soldier on the ground. Two other crewmen were injured. The plane was displaying a low level airdrop technique in which a parachute is used to pull a tank out the rear cargo door while the plane is a few feet above the ground, known as [[LAPES]] (Low Altitude Parachute Extraction System).

Revision as of 08:54, 28 February 2007

The C-130 Hercules is generally a highly reliable aircraft. The Royal Air Force recorded an accident rate of about one aircraft loss per 250,000 flying hours over the last forty years, making it one of the safest aircraft they operate (alongside Vickers VC10s and Lockheed Tristars with no flying losses).[1] However, more than 15 percent of production has been lost, including 70 by the USAF and the USMC during the conflict in Southeast Asia.[2][3] This is an incomplete listing, still under construction, and omits the JC-130A tested to destruction (53-3130, c.n. 3002), and airframes retired or withdrawn from service in the course of useful operational lives. As of February 28, 2007, the list is complete through January 1985.

Crashes by decade

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

  • RCAF RoundelOctober 30 1991: An AIRCOM CC-130 Hercules transport aircraft, CAF 130322, c.n. 4192, flying to Canadian Forces Station (CFS) Alert from Edmonton, Alberta via Thule, Greenland, was on final approach to the airstrip. The pilot apparently was flying by sight rather than relying on instruments. The aircraft crashed on Ellesmere Island approximately 18 miles short of the runway, killing 5 of the 18 passengers and crew. Subsequent rescue efforts by personnel from CFS Alert, USAF personnel from Thule, and CF personnel from 440 Squadron, CFB Edmonton, Alberta and Trenton, Ontario, were hampered by a blizzard and local terrain. The crash investigation recommended all CC-130s be retrofitted with ground proximity detectors and beefed-up Arctic Survival Equipment. The crash and rescue efforts were the basis of a film called "Ordeal in the Arctic."
  • USAF RoundelFebruary 6 1992: A C-130B, 58-0732, c.n. 3527, of the 165th Tactical Airlift Squadron, Kentucky Air National Guard, with five crew aboard (3 pilots, 1 flight engineer and 1 loadmaster), stalled on take-off and crashed one mile south of Evansville Regional Airport, Evansville, Indiana, United States, on U.S. Highway 41. Sixteen people were killed in the crash and fifteen others were injured.
  • United StatesFebruary 3 1993: A Lockheed L-100-20, c.n. 4412, used as the Lockheed HTTB (High Technology Test Bed), crashed at Dobbins Air Reserve Base, in Marietta, GA. The Lockheed engineering testbed was used to evaluate the fly-by-wire rudder actuator and the ground minimum control speed (VMCG). During the final high-speed ground test-run, the aircraft accidentally veered left and became airborne. The Hercules climbed to 250 feet and crashed. All 7 crew aboard perished in the crash, in which a Navy clinic was narrowly missed.
  • RAF Roundel May 27 1993: An RAF C-130K Hercules, 65-13038 (c/n 4213, XV193), crashed at Glen Tilt, Blair Atholl, Perthshire, Scotland when it stalled after cargo drop. 8 RAF crew and one Army Air Despatcher on board perished.
  • RCAF RoundelJuly 22 1993:A Canadian Forces CC-130E 130321 (formerly 10321), c.n. 4191, 435 Squadron, Edmonton Alberta crashed while performing a low level practice LAPES drop at CFB Wainwright, Alberta. During the drop the airplane hit a berm and crashed in prairie grassland, breaking up in three pieces.
  • USAF RoundelMarch 23 1994: an F-16D Fighting Falcon, USAF 88-0171, collided in the landing approach pattern with a C-130E Hercules, USAF 68-10942, c.n. 4322, at Pope Air Force Base, N.C., at Green Ramp, where paratroopers from adjacent Fort Bragg prepare for missions. The F-16D skidded into a C-141B Starlifter, USAF 66-0173, on Pope’s flight line. The ensuing explosion sent debris raining down on soldiers and airmen waiting to board. The C-130 managed to land safely. The incident was described in Disaster at Green Ramp a book by Mary Ellen Condon-Rall.
  • United StatesAugust 13 1994:: A civilian Lockheed C-130A, N135FF, former USAF 56-0540, c.n. 3148, operating as Tanker 82, crashed in steep mountainous terrain near Pearblossom, California. The aircraft was destroyed, killing the three people on board. The aircraft was owned by Aero Firefighting Service Company, Inc., and was operated by Hemet Valley Flying Service, Inc., on lease to the U.S. Forest Service as a public use aircraft. [21]
  • July 15 1996: A C-130H, CH-06, c.n. 4473, of the Belgian Air Force, crashed at Eindhoven AB in Eindhoven, The Netherlands. The aircraft was carrying 37 members of the Dutch Army Fanfare Band, 2 pilots, 1 engineer and 1 loadmaster (41 total). The aircraft had departed from Villafranca in Italy. It is believed that the co-pilot initiated a go-around after noticing a flock of birds on the runway. Some were ingested resulting in loss of power on three engines. The aircraft hit the runway and caught fire. Thirty two people died in the crash and resulting fire. Nine heavily burned survivors were rescued, 2 of whom later died in the hospital.
  • RAF Roundel June 11 1999: An RAF C-130 Hercules, (c/n 4264, XV298), crashed at Kukes, Albania when the load shifted on take-off.[22]

2000s

  • January 14 2000: A Bolivian Air Force C-130B, serial TAM60, former USAF 58-0758, c.n. 3559, crashed at Chimorre Airport (Bolivia). The aircraft departed down the left side of runway 35, but 600 meters from the approach end, impacted into a ditch and came to rest in a forested area off the left side of the runway. The aircraft was a total loss with 7 crew and 24 passengers dead. [23]
  • USAF RoundelJanuary 9, 2002: A United States Marine Corps KC-130R BuNo 160021, c.n. 4702, of VMGR-352 crashed into mountainous terrain while on approach to Shamsi, Pakistan, 270 kilometers southwest of Quetta, Pakistan, killing all seven crew members onboard.[24]
  • United StatesJune 17 2002: While fighting a fire in northern California, the starboard wing of a C-130A Hercules, N130HP, former USAF 56-0538, c.n. 3146, operated by Hawkins & Powers Aviation, came off as the starboard spar failed during a pull-out from a drop near Walker, California, followed a second later by the port spar. It rolled inverted and crashed into the forest, killing all three crew. This second C-130A fire fighting crash, coupled with the loss of PB4Y-2 N7620C at Estes Park, Colorado on July 18, 2002, resulted in the Interior Department canceling its contract for all heavy tankers. [25] [26]
  • USAF RoundelDecember 29 2004: In the darkness, an MC-130H Talon II, USAF 85-0012, c.n. 5054, of the 15th Special Operations Squadron, landed on an incomplete runway in Iraq. The aircraft was destroyed but fortunately there were no deaths. pictures
  • RAF RoundelJanuary 30 2005: An RAF C-130K Hercules C.1, XV179. c.n. 4195, with 10 crew on board was hit by insurgent fire while taking off from Baghdad airport for Balad. A fire triggered by the hit induced an explosion in the right hand wing fuel tank.[27]
  • December 6 2005:, An Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force C-130E military transport aircraft, IRIAF 5-8519, c.n. 4399, crashed into a ten-floor apartment building, home to a number of air force personnel, in a residential area of Tehran, the capital city of Iran. The aircraft was carrying 84 passengers (68 of whom were journalists due to watch military exercises off the country's south coast) and 10 crew members. In all, 116 people died.
  • RAF RoundelMay 24 2006: A Special Forces RAF Hercules C.1P XV206, c.n. 4231, of No. 47 Squadron's Special Forces Flight carrying the new British ambassador in Afghanistan, Stephen Evans, crash landed at a dirt landing strip outside the town of Lashkar Gar in the in Helmand Province, Afghanistan after hitting a landmine on roll-out which holed the port external fuel tank and set the number two (port inner) engine on fire. All nine crew and 26 passengers aboard safely evacuated, but the airframe burned out. It was later revealed that the Hercules was carrying a large number of SAS troops as well as a large amount of cash described as being one million dollars in some sources, and as "more than one million pounds" by others, while the MoD only admitted to a "sizeable amount of cash". The money was apparently destined for local warlords in exchange for their influence and intelligence.[28]
  • June 11 2006: Lockheed Hercules C-130H, Chad Air Force TT-PAF, formerly Lockheed N73238, c.n. 5141, crashed at Abéché, Chad. [29]
  • USAF RoundelJuly 28 2006: United States Coast Guard Lockheed Hercules HC-130H, CG 1710, c.n. 5028, crashed at Saint Paul Island, Alaska. There were no reported injuries among the nine crewmen on board. [30]
  • AlgeriaAugust 13 2006:, a Civilian Lockheed L-100-30 Hercules belonging to Air Algeria, registered 7T-VHG, formerly Lockheed N4148M, c.n. 4880, was destroyed when it collided with terrain following a high-rate descent from 24,000 feet in Piacenza, Italy. The pilot, co-pilot, and flight engineer were killed. [31]
  • RAF RoundelFebruary 12 2007: A RAF Hercules C-130J-30 ZH876, c.n. 5460, formerly Lockheed N4080M, was seriously damaged following a landing incident in the Maysan Province of Iraq near the Iranian border. The aircraft was subsequently destroyed as it was deemed too dangerous for coalition forces to repair and recover it. This is the first C-130J loss for any nationality since the new variant entered service in 1999.[32]

References

  1. ^ "Aircraft Air Accidents and Damage Rates". Defence Analytical Services Agency. Retrieved 2006-08-22.
  2. ^ "Lockheed C-130 Hercules". Aviation Safety Network. Flight Safety Foundation. 2004-11-13. Retrieved 2006-08-22. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ Aviation Safety Network
  4. ^ "60528's CREW NEVER STOOD A CHANCE!". Airborne Early Warning Association. Retrieved 2006-09-25.
  5. ^ "Air Force" Vol 28 # 4
  6. ^ [1]
  7. ^ Aviation Safety Network
  8. ^ The Times, Tuesday, 25 March 1969; pg. 2; Issue 57518; col F
  9. ^ "ASN Aircraft accident description Lockheed C-130E Hercules 63-7789". Aviation Safety Network. Flight Safety Foundation. Retrieved 2006-08-22.
  10. ^ http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19711109-0&lang=en,
  11. ^ Aviation Safety Network
  12. ^ http://okwreckchasing.com/621845.html
  13. ^ [2]
  14. ^ "Pictorial overview".
  15. ^ Aviation Safety Network
  16. ^ Aviation Safety Network
  17. ^ Aviation Safety Network
  18. ^ Aviation Safety Network
  19. ^ [3]
  20. ^ Aviation Safety Network
  21. ^ [4]
  22. ^ Aviation Safety Network
  23. ^ [5]
  24. ^ [6]
  25. ^ "Update on investigations of firefighting airplane crashes in Walker, California and Estes Park, Colorado". NTSB. 2002-09-24.
  26. ^ "Questions and Answers: Cancellation of Large Airtanker Contract" (PDF). Retrieved 2006-12-18.
  27. ^ Ripley, Tim (March 2006). "The Doomed Hercules". Air Forces Monthly. Stamford, Lincolnshire: Key Publications: 28–30.
  28. ^ Air Forces Monthly (January 2007). "Million Dollar Hercules". Air Forces Monthly. Stamford, Lincolnshire: Key Publications: 32–35.
  29. ^ [7]
  30. ^ [8]
  31. ^ [9]
  32. ^ Crash info from Aero News
  • Olausson, Lars, Lockheed Hercules Production List - 1954-2007 - 24th ed., Satenäs, Sweden, February 2006.ä