Thai Airways International Flight 311
HS-TID, the aircraft involved in the accident seen at Don Mueang International Airport in April 1992
Accident
Date31 July 1992 (1992-07-31)
SummaryLoss of situation awareness leading to CFIT and pilot error
SiteLangtang National Park, Langtang, Nepal
28°03′09″N 85°27′03″E / 28.05250°N 85.45083°E / 28.05250; 85.45083
Aircraft
Aircraft typeAirbus A310-304
Aircraft nameBuri Ram
OperatorThai Airways International
IATA flight No.TG311
ICAO flight No.THA311
Call signTHAI 311
RegistrationHS-TID
Flight originDon Mueang International Airport,
Bangkok, Thailand
DestinationTribhuvan International Airport,
Kathmandu, Nepal
Occupants113
Passengers99
Crew14
Fatalities113
Survivors0

Thai Airways International Flight 311 (TG311/THA311) was a flight from Bangkok, Thailand's Don Mueang International Airport to Kathmandu, Nepal's Tribhuvan International Airport. On Friday, 31 July 1992, an Airbus A310-304 on the route, registration HS-TID, crashed on approach to Kathmandu. At 07:00:26 UTC (12:45:26 NST; 14:00:26 ICT), the aircraft crashed into the side of a mountain 37 kilometres (23 mi) north of Kathmandu at an altitude of 11,500 ft (3,505 m) and a ground speed of 300 knots (560 km/h; 350 mph), killing all 113 passengers and crew members on board. This was both the first hull loss and the first fatal accident involving the Airbus A310.[1][2]

Aircraft and crew

The aircraft's first flight was on 2 October 1987, and it entered service with Canadian airline Wardair under the registration C-FGWD. Wardair was acquired by Canadian Airlines International in 1989 and their operations consolidated and integrated under the Canadian Airlines banner. This Airbus A310 formally entered service with Canadian Airlines from 15 January 1990 (with the same registration). It was shortly thereafter sold to Thai Airways International, which took delivery on 9 May 1990 and had it re-registered as HS-TID.[1] The aircraft was powered by two General Electric CF6-80C2A2 turbofan engines.[3][4]

At the time of its crash on 31 July 1992, the aircraft had been in commercial operations for less than five years.[1] It was piloted by Captain Preeda Suttimai (41), who had logged 13,200 flight hours including 4,400 on A310 and 1,700 hours as Pilot In Command and First Officer Phunthat Boonyayej (52), who had logged 14,600 flight hours including 4,200 on the A310. The cabin crew consisted of 12 flight attendants, looking after 99 passengers.[5]

Accident

Flight 311 departed Bangkok at 10:30 local time. It was scheduled to arrive in Kathmandu at 12:55 Nepal Standard Time.[6] After crossing into Nepalese airspace, the pilots contacted air traffic control (ATC) and were cleared for an instrument approach from the south called the "Sierra VOR circling approach" for Runway 20. Nepalese ATC at the time was not equipped with radar.[7]

Shortly after reporting the Sierra fix 10 kilometres (6.2 mi; 5.4 nmi) south of the Kathmandu VOR, the aircraft called ATC asking for a diversion to Calcutta, India, because of a "technical problem".[8] Before ATC could reply, the flight rescinded their previous transmission. The flight was then cleared for a straight-in Sierra approach to Runway 02 and told to report leaving 9,500 ft (2,896 m). The captain asked numerous times for the winds and visibility at the airport, but ATC merely told him that Runway 02 was available.

Memorial park in Kakani, Nepal

A number of frustrating and misleading communications (partly due to language problems and partly to the inexperience of the air traffic controller, who was a trainee with only nine months on the job) ensued between ATC and the pilots regarding Flight 311's altitude and distance from the airport. The captain asked four times for permission to turn left, but after receiving no firm reply to his requests, he announced that he was turning right and climbed the aircraft to flight level 200. The controller handling Flight 311 assumed from the flight's transmissions that the aircraft had called off the approach and was turning to the south, so he cleared the aircraft to 11,500 ft (3,505 m), an altitude that would have been safe in the area south of the airport. The flight descended back to 11,500 ft, went through a 360° turn, and passed over the airport northbound.

Seconds before impact, the ground proximity warning system (GPWS) activated, and sounded alarms warning the crew of the imminent collision with the mountains. First Officer Boonyayej warned Captain Suttimai and urged him to turn the aircraft around, but possibly due to his frustration from the communications with ATC, Suttimai erroneously stated the GPWS was just giving false reports. The aircraft crashed into a steep rock face in a remote area of the Langtang National Park at an altitude of 11,500 ft (3,505 m), killing all 113 people on board.

Investigation

Crash site of Thai Airways Flight 311, located between Ghopte and Tharepati Pass, Nepal, photographed in May 2016
Photographs from the crash site taken in October 1992

Investigators from the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal, Airbus Industrie, and the Transportation Safety Board of Canada (which assisted with technical details) determined that the aircraft had experienced a minor fault in the workings of the inboard trailing flaps just after the aircraft reached the Sierra reporting fix. Concerned that the complex approach into Kathmandu in instrument conditions would be difficult with malfunctioning flaps and frustrated by ATC and his first officer's inconclusive and weak answers to his questions, the captain decided to divert to Calcutta.[9] The flaps suddenly began to work properly, but the captain was forced to resolve more aspects of the difficult approach himself due to his first officer's lack of initiative. Only after numerous extremely frustrating exchanges with ATC was the captain able to obtain adequate weather information for the airport, but by that time he had overflown Kathmandu and the aircraft was headed towards the Himalayas.[9]

Nepalese authorities found that the probable causes of the accident were the captain and air traffic controller's loss of situational awareness; language and technical problems caused the captain to experience frustration and a high workload;[9] the first officer's lack of initiative and inconclusive answers to the captain's questions; the air traffic controller's inexperience, poor grasp of English, and reluctance to interfere with what he saw as piloting matters such as terrain separation; poor supervision of the inexperienced air traffic controller; Thai Airways International's failure to provide simulator training for the complex Kathmandu approach to its pilots; and improper use of the aircraft's flight management system.[7]

While trekking up the Himalaya mountain to the crash site, a British investigator from Airbus, Gordon Corps (62), died due to altitude sickness. Corps had over 11,500 flight hours and was a senior test pilot for Airbus.[10][11][12]

Victims

NationalityPassengersCrewTotal
Australia Australia101
Belgium Belgium505
Canada Canada202
Finland Finland505
Germany Germany404
Israel Israel202
Japan Japan17017
Nepal Nepal23023
New Zealand New Zealand101
South Korea South Korea202
Spain Spain303
Thailand Thailand211435
United Kingdom United Kingdom202
United States United States11011
Total (14 Nationalities)9914113[13]

Aftermath

Thai Airways retired the flight number 311 after the accident, along with its counterpart flight number 312, which had been used for the outbound flight from Kathmandu to Bangkok. These were replaced by flight numbers 319 and 320, respectively. These redesignated flights continued to be operated by Airbus A310 aircraft until this type was retired by the airline and replaced with Boeing 777 aircraft in 2001. The remains of the aircraft can still be seen in Langtang National Park on the trek from Ghopte to the Tharepati Pass.

Fifty-nine days after the Flight 311 disaster, Pakistan International Airlines Flight 268 crashed on approach to Kathmandu, killing all 167 on board, the deadliest accident in the country's history.[14]

Dramatization

The crash is featured in Season 17, Episode 10 of Mayday (Air Crash Investigation).[15] The episode is titled "The Lost Plane".

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Ranter, Harro. "Accident Description". aviation-safety.net. Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
  2. "KOIRALA v. THAI AIRWAYS INTERNATIONAL LTD". FindLaw. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
  3. "Thai Airways HS-TID (Airbus A310 - MSN 438) (Ex C-FGWD)". www.airfleets.net. Airfleets aviation. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  4. "HS-TID Thai Airways International Airbus A310-300". www.planespotters.net. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  5. "Thai jetliner crashes in Nepal". United Press International. 31 July 1992. Retrieved 20 September 2020.
  6. "Thai Airliner Crashes In Nepal's Himalayan Foothills; 113 Aboard -- 11 Americans Are Listed As Among The Passengers". Seattle Times. AP. 31 July 1992. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
  7. 1 2 Learmount, David (9 June 1993). "Confusion caused Kathmandu A310 crash" (PDF). Flight Global. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 June 2016. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
  8. Special to The New York Times (2 August 1992). "Rescue Teams Fail to Find Thai Jet That Crashed With 113 Aboard". The New York Times. Associated Press. ISSN 0362-4331.
  9. 1 2 3 Hoang, Vicki (1996). "Cultural Factors in Aviation Incidents and Accidents: Thai Airways International Flight TG-311 — Kathmandu, Nepal". Cockpit-Cabin Communication: The Impact of National and Occupational Cultures (Master's thesis). San Jose, CA: San Jose State University. pp. 11–13. Document No.1382581.
  10. "British pilot dies on Airbus mission".
  11. "Test pilot dies". Independent.co.uk. 22 October 2011.
  12. "High Altitude Claims Life of Probe Leader". 5 August 1992.
  13. "113 Feared Dead in Nepal Crash; Thai jetliner slams into Himalayan hillside during heavy monsoon rains". Los Angeles Times. Associated Press. 1 August 1992.
  14. Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Airbus A300B4-203 AP-BCP Kathmandu-Tribhuvan Airport (KTM)". aviation-safety.net. Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
  15. Mayday: Air Disaster - Investigating the Unlikely Crash Site of Thai Airways Flight 311 In The Himalayas, retrieved 2 January 2024


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