Incident Overview

Date: Tuesday 31 December 1968
Aircraft Type: Vickers 720C Viscount
Owner/operator: MacRobertson Miller Airlines, lsf Ansett-ANA
Registration Number: VH-RMQ
Location: 45 km S of Port Hedland, WA – ÿ Australia
Phase of Flight: En route
Status: Destroyed, written off
Casualties: Fatalities: 26 / Occupants: 26
Component Affected: The starboard wing.The starboard wing.
Investigating Agency: ASIBASIB
Category: Accident
On October 26, 2007, a Vickers Viscount aircraft crashed in Australia after a failure of the right-hand wing south of Port Hedland, killing all 26 occupants. The flight, departing Perth, Australia, at 08:36, ascended to Flight Level 190 and encountered moderate turbulence. At 11:20, the flight advised a descent to FL190, commencing three minutes later. At 11:34, the flight reported a 30-mile DME distance south of Port Hedland and left 7,000 feet on descent. Rapid and steep descent occurred, and the aircraft subsequently descended further. The wreckage was found at 28 miles from Port Hedland. Investigation revealed that the starboard wing separated from the aircraft due to a failure of the starboard wing, causing significant damage to the tail section and rear fuselage. The failure resulted in fuel release and subsequent burning, leading to the separation of the engine installations and the subsequent violent separation of the remaining aircraft components.On October 26, 2007, a Vickers Viscount aircraft crashed in Australia after a failure of the right-hand wing south of Port Hedland, killing all 26 occupants. The flight, departing Perth, Australia, at 08:36, ascended to Flight Level 190 and encountered moderate turbulence. At 11:20, the flight advised a descent to FL190, commencing three minutes later. At 11:34, the flight reported a 30-mile DME distance south of Port Hedland and left 7,000 feet on descent. Rapid and steep descent occurred, and the aircraft subsequently descended further. The wreckage was found at 28 miles from Port Hedland. Investigation revealed that the starboard wing separated from the aircraft due to a failure of the starboard wing, causing significant damage to the tail section and rear fuselage. The failure resulted in fuel release and subsequent burning, leading to the separation of the engine installations and the subsequent violent separation of the remaining aircraft components.

Description

MacRobertson Miller Airlines flight 1750, a Vickers Viscount, crashed following a a failure of the right-hand wing south of Port Hedland, Australia, killing all 26 occupants. Flight 1750 departed Perth, Australia at 08:36 hours local time on a domestic flight to Port Hedland. The flight climbed to Flight Level 190, encountering light to moderate turbulence. The en route part of the flight was uneventful. At 11:20 hours the flight advised that it would be commencing its descent from FL190 in three minutes. At 11:34 hours the flight reported that it was then 30 miles by Distance Measuring Equipment (DME) south of Port Hedland and had left 7,000 feet on descent. This was the last message received from the aircraft. The aircraft was seen to descend rapidly and steeply a little later. The wreckage was found at 28 miles from Port Hedland. Investigation showed that at 11:34:12 hours the starboard wing of the aircraft, outboard of Station 143 and including the No. 4 engine installation, separated from the aircraft in flight. Immediately following this failure some components of the starboard wing struck the starboard tailplane and elevator causing the outboard portions of these two components to fail and the tail section and rear fuselage to separate from the aircraft. At the same time fuel released into the air from the ruptured fuel tanks burned momentarily and affected, superficially, some external surfaces of the aircraft. The gyrations of the aircraft subsequent to the wing failure were violent enough to cause the other three engine installations to separate inflight. The remainder of the aircraft, comprising the cabin, cockpit, port wing and the inboard portion of the starboard wing, struck the ground at 11:34:38 hours. Investigation further revealed that the starboard inner wing had failed in upward bending at Station 143, where the strength of the lower boom of the main spar had been substantially reduced by fatigue cracking extending over some 85% of its cross-sectional area. It is probable that, at the time of the failure, flight loads close to 1g steady flight loads were being applied to the wing. CAUSE: “The cause of the accident was that the fatigue endurance of the starboard inner main spar lower boom was substantially reduced by the insertion of a flared bush at station 143 when the margin of safety associated with the retirement life specified for such booms did not ensure that this boom would achieve its retirement life in the presence of such a defect.”

Primary Cause

Fatigue failure of the starboard inner main spar lower boom, exacerbated by the insertion of a flared bush at Station 143, resulting in insufficient margin of safety for its retirement life.Fatigue failure of the starboard inner main spar lower boom, exacerbated by the insertion of a flared bush at Station 143, resulting in insufficient margin of safety for its retirement life.

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