BKS Air Transport Flight C.6845

{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2019}}

{{Infobox aircraft occurrence

| name = BKS Air Transport Flight C.6845

| image = Airspeed AS 57 Ambassador 2 G-AMAD, BKS Air Transport, Southend, UK, Oct 1966 (9184456733).jpg

| alt = Twin-engined, triple-tailed, high-winged propeller-driven passenger aircraft, in profile on an airport taxiway. Natural metal finish except for airline insignia and a lengthwise stripe along the length of the fuselage.

| caption = G-AMAD, the Airspeed Ambassador involved, seen in 1966

| date = 3 July 1968

| summary = Mechanical failure caused by metal fatigue

| occurrence_type = Accident

| site = Heathrow Airport, England

| coordinates = {{coord|51.4734|N|0.4501|W|region:GB|display=inline,title}}

| aircraft_type = Airspeed Ambassador

| operator = BKS Air Transport

| tail_number = G-AMAD

| occupants = 8

| passengers = 5

| crew = 3

| fatalities = 6

| survivors = 2

}}

On 3 July 1968, BKS Air Transport Flight C.6845, an Airspeed Ambassador registration G-AMAD of BKS Air Transport crashed at Heathrow Airport, damaging two parked Trident airliners as it cartwheeled into the incomplete Heathrow Terminal 1, then under construction. Six of the eight people on board the Ambassador were killed, along with the eight racehorses being transported on it.{{ASN accident|id=19680703-0}} citing Aircraft Illustrated Vol.1, nr. 4 (Oct. 1968), p.127 The crash was blamed on the failure of a flap-operating rod due to metal fatigue, resulting in asymmetrical lift.

Category:Filmed deaths during aviation accidents and incidents

Accident

The Ambassador, construction number 5211,{{cite book|last=Denham|first=Terry|title=World Directory of Airliner Crashes|publisher=Patrick Stephens Ltd|year=1996|isbn=1-85260-554-5|location=Sparkford|pages=85, 107}} had previously been British European Airways' Sir Francis Drake. It had recently been converted to a "horsebox" transport and was on a flight from Deauville, France, to Heathrow Airport. Flight C.6845 was transporting eight racehorses belonging to businessman William Hill together with five grooms. As the aircraft was landing on Heathrow's runway 28R the left wing dropped, and the wing tip and left landing gear touched the grass adjacent to the runway. The crew tried to increase power to go-around and climb away, but the bank angle increased. The aircraft hit two parked empty British European Airways Hawker Siddeley Tridents, knocking the tail fin off one (G-ARPI) and slicing off the entire tail section of the other (G-ARPT). The Ambassador cartwheeled following the impact and slid upside down coming up against the ground floor of the terminal building where there was an explosion.{{cite journal|url=http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1968/1968%20-%201196.html |title=BKS Crash: Fatigue-failure |journal=Flight International|page=42|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180807155915/https://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1968/1968%20-%201196.html|archive-date=2018-08-07}}

File:Vickers Viscount 806 ‘G-APKF’ Michael Faraday” British European Airways.jpg

Six people on board the Ambassador died, including the flight crew and three of five grooms, along with all eight horses. The other two grooms were seriously injured as were two people on the ground. A further 29 people on the ground received slight injuries.

Of the two Trident aircraft, G-ARPT was damaged beyond economic repair and G-ARPI was subsequently repaired. G-ARPI was involved in an accident in 1972 resulting in the deaths of 118 people and becoming the deadliest non-terrorist aviation accident in the UK. A Viscount (G-APKF) received slight damage. The Viscount was also repaired but later too involved in a fatal hull-loss accident in Cambodia as XW-TDN in 1975.{{Cite web | url=http://www.vickersviscount.net/Index/VickersViscount396History.aspx |title = Viscount c/N 396 operational record}}

All other Ambassadors were grounded pending the result of an inquiry. The starboard rod from the aircraft was tested and found satisfactory but rods from some other Ambassadors showed signs of cracking and when tested failed in a similar manner to G-AMAD's port rod. The rods on aircraft were strengthened and shown to be capable of 37,000 hours flight time.

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Probable cause

The port (left) flap operating rod had failed due to metal fatigue. While the mechanism had failed, the compensating mechanism between the two sets of flaps remained intact. The port flaps had retracted but the compensator caused the starboard ones to extend further. The resulting asymmetry of lift resulted in the roll to port.

The pilot probably tried to overshoot and set the flaps to the correct 10 degrees, but due to the mechanism design this was not sufficient to cause the starboard flaps to retract (which would have taken 25 seconds in any event). The Department of Transport report concluded that whatever the pilot's actions, it was "doubtful" whether an accident could have been avoided.

After the accident all Ambassadors were fitted with steel reinforcements to the flap operating rods.

See also

References

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Further reading

  • "Report on the Accident to Ambassador AS.57 Series 2, G-AMAD, at Heathrow Airport, London, on 3 July 1968". CAP 322, HMSO
  • [http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1969/1969%20-%202440.html "Ambassador accident cause detailed"] Flight International 1969. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121112183309/http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1969/1969%20-%202440.html |date=12 November 2012 }}