Incident Overview

Date: Friday 29 August 1952
Aircraft Type: Douglas DC-2-115B
Owner/operator: Phoenix Airlines
Registration Number: ZS-DFW
Location: Kosti Airport (KST) – ÿ Sudan
Phase of Flight: Landing
Status: Destroyed, written off
Casualties: Fatalities: 2 / Occupants: 4
Component Affected: DC-2 aircraft (specifically ZS-DFX and ZS-DFW)DC-2 aircraft (specifically ZS-DFX and ZS-DFW)
Category: Accident
On August 27, 1952, a cargo flight from Palmietfontein to Southend, UK, involving two DC-2 aircraft, experienced a significant accident due to severe weather conditions. The aircraft lost altitude and landed in a hazardous location after a forced landing due to fuel exhaustion. Following a diversion to El Obeid, the pilots attempted a landing at Kosti, a non-equipped aerodrome, and subsequently ran off the runway, damaging a steel windsock support. The incident highlights a failure to adequately prepare for potential landing alternatives and the captain’s responsibility for operational control, including diversionary actions.On August 27, 1952, a cargo flight from Palmietfontein to Southend, UK, involving two DC-2 aircraft, experienced a significant accident due to severe weather conditions. The aircraft lost altitude and landed in a hazardous location after a forced landing due to fuel exhaustion. Following a diversion to El Obeid, the pilots attempted a landing at Kosti, a non-equipped aerodrome, and subsequently ran off the runway, damaging a steel windsock support. The incident highlights a failure to adequately prepare for potential landing alternatives and the captain’s responsibility for operational control, including diversionary actions.

Description

Two Phoenix Airlines DC-2 aircraft departed Palmietfontein on a cargo flight to Southend, UK on August 27, 1952. On the first leg to Bulawayo the crew of DC-2 ZS-DFX got lost and carried out a forced landing 20 miles west of Bulawayo because of fuel exhaustion. DC-2 ZS-DFW reached Bulawayo where two passengers decided not to complete the flight. ZS-DFW, overloaded at takeoff from Palmietfontein, was still overloaded when departing Juba at 15:45 on August 29. Bad weather forced the captain to divert. A diversion to El Obeid was not possible because of a lack of fuel, so at 20:40 the crew radioed to the Khartoum controller that they were going to divert to Kosti. The aircraft touched down on the NE-SE runway from the Southwest, overran, striking a strong steel tubular support for a windsock and came to rest in trees. Neither pilot appeared to be endorsed for DC-2 aircraft, but the co-pilot was entitled to fly in such a capacity without a DC-2 rating. PROBABLE CAUSE: “The primary cause of the accident was that extremely bad weather forced the Captain of the aeroplane to divert from his original destination. No proper preparation had been made for a possible landing at an alternate airfield prior to commencement of flight. The secondary cause was due to the Captain’s attempt to execute a landing at Kosti aerodrome which was not equipped with night landing facilities. The Captain landed on the runway but was unable to align himself with the centre line and in consequence ran off the runway and struck a steel windsock support and thereafter struck various obstructions such as trees which lay in the path.” CONTRIBUTORY CAUSES: “Because of radio interference due to a storm, proper use could not be made of the radio navigational facilities carried on the aircraft. The lack of appreciation by the Captain of his final responsibility for the operational control of the aircraft, which includes diversionary action, and his apparent failure to appreciate the purely advisory responsibility of Khartoum as a flight information centre.”

Primary Cause

Severe weather conditions, specifically a storm, forced the Captain to divert from his original destination, leading to the loss of altitude and subsequent landing in a dangerous location.Severe weather conditions, specifically a storm, forced the Captain to divert from his original destination, leading to the loss of altitude and subsequent landing in a dangerous location.

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