Aeroflot Flight 902

Aeroflot Flight 902
A Tupolev Tu-104A, similar to the one involved in the accident, is seen here at Arlanda Airport in 1966
Accident
Date June 30, 1962
Summary Stall, loss of control (official) / Accidental shootdown (unofficial)
Site Beryozovsky District, Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russia
Aircraft
Aircraft type Tupolev Tu-104A
Operator Aeroflot/Far East
Registration СССР-42370
Flight origin Khabarovsk Airport
1st stopover Omsk Airport
2nd stopover Irkutsk Airport
Destination Vnukovo Airport
Passengers 76
Crew 8
Fatalities 84
Injuries 0

Aeroflot/Far East Flight 902 was a flight on scheduled domestic service from Khabarovsk to Moscow with intermediate stops at Irkutsk and Omsk in the Soviet Union. The flight was operated by a Tu-104A aircraft. On June 30, 1962, with 62 adult passengers, 14 children and 8 crew members, the flight departed Irkutsk on schedule, and made a scheduled report 50 kilometers from Krasnoyarsk. A few minutes later, an agitated voice later identified as that of the second pilot made an incoherent emergency transmission with a background of an unusual noise, and repeated attempts to contact the flight failed. Its wreckage was found 28 kilometers east of Krasnoyarsk airport in flat terrain with small areas of forest. Investigators subsequently determined that the plane had impacted the ground upside-down at an angle of 40 degrees. There were no survivors.[1]

At the time, the official cause of the disaster was announced to be a stall and loss of spatial orientation in clouds, or a loss of control due to a fire in the passenger cabin or other unknown reasons. However, damage found on the port side of the fuselage (specifically, an entry hole with signs of fire damage on the cabin side of the fuselage) was consistent with that that could be caused by an anti-aircraft missile, and there was an unofficial confirmation that an anti-aircraft missile had gone astray during an air defense exercise in the area.[1]

References

Specific

  1. 1 2 "Criminal occurrence description Flight 902". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 19 July 2013.

General

  • "Crash of Tu-104A near Krasnoyarsk (in Russian: Катастрофа Ту-104А Дальневосточного управления ГВФ близ Красноярска" (in Russian). airdisaster.ru. Archived from the original on 2012-10-25. Retrieved 2012-10-10.
  • Kasatkin, Vasiliy (2008-04-17). "Dangerous Sky (in Russian: Опасное небо)" (in Russian). Krasnoyarskiy Rabochiy (in Russian: Красноярский рабочий). Archived from the original on 2012-10-25. Retrieved 2012-10-10.

Coordinates: 56°1′45.84″N 93°4′3″E / 56.0294000°N 93.06750°E / 56.0294000; 93.06750


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