Incident Overview

Date: Saturday 17 June 1989
Aircraft Type: Ilyushin Il-62M
Owner/operator: Interflug
Registration Number: DDR-SEW
Location: Berlin-Sch”nefeld Airport (SXF) – ÿ Germany
Phase of Flight: Take off
Status: Destroyed, written off
Casualties: Fatalities: 21 / Occupants: 113
Component Affected: Flight Control Systems (specifically the elevator system) and the Aircraft’s Control Surfaces.Flight Control Systems (specifically the elevator system) and the Aircraft’s Control Surfaces.
Category: Accident
On takeoff from Berlin-Sch”nefeld Airport, East Germany, an Ilyushin Il-62M aircraft experienced a catastrophic accident following a runway excursion. The flight control systems were not fully activated, leading to a critical failure in the elevator check. The captain failed to address the warning panel, resulting in the aircraft remaining in a state of alert. The aircraft then accelerated rapidly, resulting in a rollover and subsequent damage. The pilot initiated an emergency brake, causing the aircraft to roll over and collide with multiple obstacles, including a pit and a water tank. The incident resulted in significant casualties and damage to the airport infrastructure.On takeoff from Berlin-Sch”nefeld Airport, East Germany, an Ilyushin Il-62M aircraft experienced a catastrophic accident following a runway excursion. The flight control systems were not fully activated, leading to a critical failure in the elevator check. The captain failed to address the warning panel, resulting in the aircraft remaining in a state of alert. The aircraft then accelerated rapidly, resulting in a rollover and subsequent damage. The pilot initiated an emergency brake, causing the aircraft to roll over and collide with multiple obstacles, including a pit and a water tank. The incident resulted in significant casualties and damage to the airport infrastructure.

Description

Interflug flight 102, an Ilyuhsin Il-62M, was destroyed following a runway excursion accident on takeoff from Berlin-Sch”nefeld Airport, East Germany. Of the 113 occupants, 21 were killed. At 06:20 hours local time the engines were started. Immediately thereafter, the flight control surfaces were unlocked, a process which, according to the cockpit voice recorder, was not completed. The crew did not carry out the necessary check of the warning panel on the condition of the elevator. While taxiing for departure, the captain checked for the second time the movement of the elevators but failed to notice they were locked. The aircraft was cleared for takeoff from runway 25L and the engines were adjusted to rated power due to the low take-off mass of 113 tons. At 06:28:05 the aircraft reached VR. The captain pulled the control column during VR, but the aircraft did not respond. Four seconds later he called out to abort the takeoff. At this time the aircraft had attained a speed of 293 km/h. Instead of using reverse thrust, the flight engineer shut down all four engines. The speed at this time was 303 km/h and the remaining distance to the end of the runway was about 940 meters. The aircraft rolled over the end of the runway at a speed of 262 km/h and slightly to the left of the center line. During the emergency braking five tires of the main landing gear had been destroyed. The aircaft crossed an excavation pit of 40 cm deep, causing the right main landing gear to collapse. It then collided with a water tank, concrete piles of the airport fence, a road embankment and six trees. At 06:28:37 the aircraft came to rest and burst into flames. Within two minutes, 82 passengers could be rescued alive from the fuselage, which had been broken into three parts. All ten crew members survived.

Source of Information

https://www.airhistory.net/info/soviet.php, http://www.interflug.biz/DDR-SEW.htmhttps://www.airhistory.net/info/soviet.php, http://www.interflug.biz/DDR-SEW.htm

Primary Cause

Failure to properly activate and verify elevator systems during takeoff, leading to a loss of control and subsequent rollover.Failure to properly activate and verify elevator systems during takeoff, leading to a loss of control and subsequent rollover.

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