Viasa Flight 742
A Viasa DC-9 similar to the accident aircraft
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Accident summary | |
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Date | March 16, 1969 |
Summary | Faulty runway temperature sensors, overweight |
Site | Maracaibo, Venezuela |
Passengers | 74 |
Crew | 10 |
Fatalities | 155 (84 on board + 71 on the ground) |
Survivors | 0 |
Aircraft type | McDonnell Douglas DC-9-32 |
Operator | Viasa |
Registration | YV-C-AVD |
Flight origin | Simón Bolívar International Airport, Caracas |
Stopover | Aeropuerto Grano de Oro, Maracaibo |
Destination | Miami International Airport, Miami, Florida |
Viasa Flight 742 was an international, scheduled passenger flight from Caracas, Venezuela to Miami International Airport with an intermediate stopover in Maracaibo, Venezuela that crashed on 16 March 1969. After taking off, the DC-9-30 hit a series of power lines before crashing into the La Trinidad section of Maracaibo. All 84 people on board perished, as well as 71 on the ground.
The DC-9 involved in the crash was on lease from Avensa and had only been in service a few weeks.[1]
The cause of the crash was attributed to faulty sensors along the runway and the take-off calculations made from the erroneous information they had provided, which resulted in an aircraft overloaded by more than 5,000 pounds[2] for the prevailing conditions. Only two days after the crash, Venezuela's Public Works Minister ascribed runway length as a contributing factor in the disaster.[3]
When Flight 742 crashed it was the first loss of a DC-9-30, and it remains the deadliest accident involving that class of aircraft. It was also the deadliest accident in Venezuela until West Caribbean Airways Flight 708 (operated by a McDonnell Douglas MD-80, the DC-9's successor aircraft) crashed over thirty-six years later. At the time, the crash was the world's deadliest civil air disaster.[4] The fatality total was surpassed in 1971 by All Nippon Airways Flight 58, which killed 162 people after colliding with an F-86 fighter jet.
One of the people who perished in the Viasa Flight 742 crash was San Francisco Giants pitching prospect Néstor Chávez. [5]
References
- ↑ Accident description for YV-C-AVD at the Aviation Safety Network
- ↑ Crashed plane said overloaded
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Disasters: The Worst Ever(subscription required)
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- 1969 in Venezuela
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