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Japan Air Lines Flight 2

Japan Air Lines Flight 2 was a scheduled passenger flight on November 22, 1968.[2] The plane was a new Douglas DC-8-62 named Shiga (志賀), flying from Tokyo International Airport (Haneda) to San Francisco International Airport (SFO). Due to heavy fog and other factors, Captain Kohei Asoh mistakenly ditched the plane near Coyote Point in the shallow waters of San Francisco Bay, two and a half miles short of the runway.[3][4] All 107 people on board survived the accident without any injuries.

Japan Air Lines Flight 2
Japan Airlines Flight 2 in the water short of the runway at San Francisco International Airport
Accident
DateNovember 22, 1968 (1968-11-22), 1724:24 UTC (9:24 a.m. PST)
SummaryAccidental ditching on approach due to pilot error
SiteSan Francisco Bay, San Mateo County, California, United States
37°35′25″N 122°18′19″W / 37.59028°N 122.30528°W / 37.59028; -122.30528[1]: 7 
Aircraft
Aircraft typeDouglas DC-8-62
OperatorJapan Airlines
IATA flight No.JL2
ICAO flight No.JAL2
Call signJAPAN AIR 2
RegistrationJA8032
Flight originTokyo International Airport
DestinationSan Francisco International Airport
Occupants107
Passengers96
Crew11
Fatalities0
Injuries0
Survivors107 (all)

Flight edit

Flight 2 was scheduled to depart Tokyo at 5 p.m. (08:00 UTC) on Friday, November 22 and land in San Francisco at 10:15 a.m. (17:15 UTC).[5] Actual departure was delayed to 5:36 p.m. (08:36 UTC) due to required maintenance on the pilot's instrument panel, which was providing inconsistent altitude readings.[1]: 3  Command of the flight fell to Captain Kohei Asoh (46), accompanied in the cockpit by first officer Captain Joseph Hazen (34), flight engineer Richard Fahning (40), and navigator Ichiryo Suzuki (27).[1]: 8–10  The flight was conducted without incident over the next eight hours.[1]: 3  The aircraft serial number was 45954, built May 18, 1962 and delivered on May 27. It was equipped with four Pratt & Whitney JT3D-3B engines, which had a total operating time of 17:07:54 hours.[1]: 10 

As it approached its destination, JAL002 was picked up by local radar in Oakland at 8:54 a.m. (16:54 UTC) when 169 nmi (313 km; 194 mi) on the 257th radial from the Oakland Vortac and the aircraft was cleared for landing at SFO via a waypoint 21 mi (34 km) west of the Woodside Vortac station at an altitude of 8,000 ft (2,400 m).[1]: 3  Oakland TRACON advised the pilots that local visibility at SFO was 34 mi (1.2 km) and the runway visual range exceeded 6,000 ft (1,800 m), recommending the flight to hold.[1]: 3  Commanding pilot Captain Kohei Asoh attempted an automatic-coupled Instrument Landing System (ILS) approach due to the heavy fog,[1]: 5  which he had never done before on a recorded DC-8-62 flight.[1]: 9  JAL002 had started descending from its cruising altitude of 37,000 ft (11,000 m) at 8:59 a.m. (16:59 UTC), passing through 13,000 ft (4,000 m) approximately eleven minutes later, when Oakland TRACON provided an update on runway visual range at SFO, which had fallen to 3,500 ft (1,100 m).[1]: 4  JAL002 continued its descent as air traffic control was handed over to Bay TRACON while close to the Woodside Vortac; the pilot reported an altitude of 8,000 ft (2,400 m) at 9:12:54.3 a.m. (17:12:54.3 UTC), then 6,500 ft (2,000 m) at 9:14:11.3 a.m. (17:14:11.3 UTC).[1]: 4 

 
 
 
3km
2miles
 
 
Landing site
near Coyote Point
 
Start of Runway 28L
Key locations for JAL002 / JA8032, November 22, 1968

Less than a minute later, Captain Asoh requested that "due to the weather at San Francisco, we'd like a long final [approach], rather than direct to the outer marker", which would put the aircraft 6 mi (9.7 km) to the east of the original landing path marker and provide a straighter approach to the runway.[1]: 4  Under the ILS approach, the autopilot and flight director would be used to control the aircraft's heading and altitude.[1]: 5  At 9:16 a.m. (17:16 UTC), Bay TRACON instructed Captain Asoh to descend to and maintain 4,000 ft (1,200 m) altitude and turn left to a heading of 040° while holding at an airspeed of 180 kn (330 km/h; 210 mph).[1]: 4  Updates were made to the flight's heading and altitude in response to air traffic control, and the final approach was commanded at 9:20:44 a.m. when Bay TRACON instructed JAL002 to make a left turn and assume a heading of 280° as they passed through the localizer in accordance with the ILS approach.[1]: 4  Once the localizer was captured, Captain Asoh moved the autopilot selector from VOR LOC to ILS and slowed the plane to 160 kn (300 km/h; 180 mph) in accordance with instructions from the ground; he used the radio direction indicator as the primary instrument for the approach rather than the glide slope deviation indicator, which was fluctuating at the time.[1]: 5  In addition, because his pressure altimeter had been replaced prior to the start of the flight, Captain Asoh did not trust its readings, especially since it continued to disagree with the copilot's instrument, indicating a brief climb each time the aircraft had leveled off during the flight.[1]: 6 

The cloud ceiling was 300 ft (91 m)[1]: 12  and there was little contrast between the sky and the calm waters of the bay. As a result, during the final descent, the too-low altitude was not recognized in time to correct it before hitting the water. Captain Asoh had set his minimum descent altitude alert to 211 ft (64 m); the alert was triggered by the radio altimeter, as the pressure altimeter was reading 300 ft (91 m) at the time; as Captain Asoh checked for runway lights, copilot Captain Hazen called out visual updates: "[we are] breaking out of the overcast — I cannot see the runway light — we are too low — pull up, pull up".[1]: 6–7  Captain Asoh later stated that he realized the plane was too low once he spotted the water after the plane broke through the fog with an air speed of 177 mi/h (285 km/h). He grabbed the control stick to gain altitude and advanced the throttles in anticipation of having to abort the landing and perform a go-around, but the plane's main landing gear had already struck the water,[6] first right then left, approximately 2+12 mi (4.0 km) short of Runway 28L. The plane landed in the water at approximately 9:24:25 a.m. (1724:25 UTC).[1]: 7  Passenger Walter Dunbar recalled "We came in alongside the mountains and went into thick fog. The next thing I knew, we were about one foot off the water. She hit, skipped twice, then nosed up."[5]

 
Coyote Point Marina / Yacht Harbor (2021), where passengers disembarked from rafts

An early report from the Coast Guard stated the aircraft came to rest upside down.[7] In fact, the plane came to rest on the Bay floor in shallow water approximately 7 feet (2.1 m) deep,[8] leaving the forward exits above the waterline.[4] The chief purser, Kazuo Hashimoto, felt there was no panic amongst passengers after landing, and tried to make an announcement with the public address (PA) system. Since the PA system had failed after the landing, he ended up shouting from the forward cabin for passengers to "Be quiet, the plane has reached the bottom of the sea. It will not sink. Do not worry, we are well-fixed for evacuation."[9] The passengers and crew all evacuated the plane on lifeboats, which were towed by police and Coast Guard boats to the nearby Coyote Point Yacht Harbor. Captain Asoh was the last to leave.[6] Asoh returned to the plane after ensuring everyone was safely ashore to gather and return the passengers' personal belongings.[8]

After the incident, the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) stated it was the first successful ditching of a jetliner since the inauguration of jet service.[a] The landing may have been assisted by the unusually high tide of 7 feet (2.1 m), compared with the typical water level of 4 feet (1.2 m), leading South San Francisco fire chief John Marchi to declare the ditching "a one-in-a-million shot" as the increased depth gave sufficient cushioning while being shallow enough that exit doors would remain above the water.[8]

Investigation edit

"The probable cause of this accident was the improper application of the prescribed procedures to execute an automatic-coupled ILS approach. This deviation from the prescribed procedures was, in part, due to a lack of familiarization and infrequent operation of the installed flight director and autopilot system."

 — NTSB Report AAR-70-02[4]

Captain Asoh was a veteran pilot who had flown with Japan Air Lines for 14 years in 1968, with roughly 10,000 hours of flight time,[6] 1,000 of them on DC-8s. During World War II he served as a flight instructor for the Japanese military.[2] His first officer, Captain Joseph Hazen, had similar flight experience and served in the Marine Corps before flying for Air America from 1961 to 1968.[11] Captain Asoh had 1,062 hours of flight time in the DC-8, while Captain Hazen had 18.[1]: 9  After becoming familiarized with the DC-8-62 in April 1968, Captain Asoh piloted approximately one round-trip from Tokyo to San Francisco and back via Honolulu per month, starting in July.[1]: 9  At the time, Captain Asoh stated (through a translator) that "the plane was fully automatic" and he couldn't "say what was wrong [to cause the water landing]" because he had been in contact with the control tower during the entire approach and was never informed he had deviated from the flight path.[6]

According to the NTSB report, Captain Asoh failed to follow the published Japan Airlines procedures to perform an autopilot-controlled descent from the Woodside Vortac and subsequent automatic-coupled approach on ILS. Had the procedure been followed, the localizer first would be coupled, then the flight director/autopilot coupling system would permit the glide slope to be captured. According to his statement, Captain Asoh did not set the autopilot for ILS capture until the aircraft had descended to an altitude of 2,500 ft (760 m), when it was already below the required glide slope. In-cockpit instruments then should have been sufficient to warn the crew, more than three minutes before the water landing.[1]: 26  Other JAL crews reported they were not trained in the use of the Sperry Flight Director System, resulting in revisions to the training program for flight crews.[1]: 27  In addition, the language barrier between the commanding pilot and first officer could have been a contributing cause, as there was apparently insufficient "understanding, coordination, and confidence between crewmembers that the pilot flying the aircraft reacts to the other pilot's calls in a manner much the same as if he himself is looking through the other's eyes."[1]: 27 

The "Asoh defense" edit

When asked by the NTSB about the landing, Captain Asoh reportedly replied, "As you Americans say, I fucked up."[2] In his 1988 book The Abilene Paradox, author Jerry B. Harvey termed this frank acceptance of blame the "Asoh defense",[12] and the story and term have been taken up by a number of other management theorists.[13]

Aftermath edit

 
The aircraft was later repaired and flew for Okada Air.

The aircraft was not severely damaged and was recovered 55 hours after the incident[14][15] at high tide, after several failed earlier attempts to hoist it out of the water.[16] Bigge Drayage Company recovered the airplane using four crane barges; the primary lift was handled by two Smith-Rice 90-ton Dravo revolving cranes under the wings, while two Healy-Tibbitts 50-ton cranes were positioned fore and aft to maintain the balance of the aircraft as it was lifted from the water. Because the tail had flooded, the aft crane performed the first lift to allow water to drain, and 20,000 US gal (76,000 L; 17,000 imp gal) of fresh water were used to rinse that section after 35 to 40 short tons (32 to 36 t) of saltwater had been removed. The forward crane was held in standby in case the load shifted due to movement of liquids inside the plane.[17] A rig designed by Albert Kelly, named Air International Recovery (A.I.R.), was used during the salvage, equipped with lifting beams under each wing and a cradle for the nose.[18] After being sprayed down with 20,000 US gallons (76,000 L; 17,000 imp gal) of fresh water, it was transported to the airport on a 150-foot (46 m) barge.[19]

After being transported to the airport, Shiga rolled off the barge on its own landing gear.[18] External damage was extremely minor, as it had been noted that the only part of external equipment damaged on the aircraft was the right gear bogie, as one wheel had been sheared off when the plane ditched.[15] Further inspections revealed only slight structural damage, with repairs estimated to take less than six months.[20]

United Airlines offered JAL to refurbish and repair the aircraft for US$4,000,000 (equivalent to $33,230,000 in 2023), to which Japan Airlines agreed, and the aircraft was fixed and refurbished over a period of half a year.[21][22] The aircraft was returned to JAL on March 31, 1969,[14] and underwent a successful test flight on April 11, 1969, from San Francisco to Honolulu.[22] It was later renamed Hidaka (日高) and continued in service to JAL until 1983.

Asoh was temporarily barred from passenger planes,[23] demoted to First Officer, went through further ground training,[22] and continued to fly for JAL until his retirement. Hazen also returned to flying a few months later.

By 1973 Japan Air Lines was using Boeing 747 aircraft on the Tokyo to San Francisco route.[21] Today, Japan Airlines still operates a route named Flight 2 (JAL002) from Haneda to San Francisco, currently using the Boeing 777-300ER or Boeing 787-9.[24]

Aircraft later history edit

JA8032 was sold to Air ABC (registration TF-BBF), then to Okada Air (registration 5N-AON), and finally flew as an express freighter for Airborne Express (registration N808AX[25]) before being decommissioned and scrapped at Wilmington Air Park (ILN) in December 2001.[2]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This was not the first successful ditching of a jetliner since the inauguration of jet service. The first was Aeroflot Flight 366, a Tupolev Tu-124, which took place on 21 August 1963. The aircraft ran out of fuel and ditched in the Neva River, Soviet Union. All 52 people on board that flight survived and sustained no injuries.[10]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Aircraft Accident Report: Japan Airlines Co., Ltd.; DC-8-62, JA 8032; San Francisco Bay; San Francisco, California (PDF) (Report). National Transportation Safety Board. December 31, 1969. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d "Splashdown of the "Shiga"". Check-Six.com. Retrieved May 11, 2011.
  3. ^ Silagi, Richard (March 9, 2001). . Airliners.net. Archived from the original on March 24, 2016. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
  4. ^ a b c . National Transportation Safety Board. Archived from the original on January 1, 2015. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  5. ^ a b "JAL jet ends up in bay; 107 safe". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. UPI. November 22, 1968. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d "107 On Board Uninjured As Jetliner Lands In Bay". Toledo Blade. AP. 22 November 1968. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  7. ^ "Jetliner Crashes Into Bay". Reading Eagle. UPI. 22 November 1968. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  8. ^ a b c "High Tide Cushioned Japan Air Line Crash". The Day. New London, Connecticut. AP. 23 November 1968. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  9. ^ Thackrey, Donald B. (23 November 1968). "No One Panicked in Bay Landing". Eugene Register-Guard. UPI. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  10. ^ . scramble.nl. 27 February 2018. Archived from the original on 27 February 2018. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
  11. ^ "Joseph William "Joe" Hazen 1934 - 2020". The Seattle Times. April 18, 2020. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
  12. ^ Harvey, Jerry B. (1988). The Abilene Paradox and Other Meditations on Management. Wiley. ISBN 9780669191790.
  13. ^ Senge, Peter M (1990). The Fifth Discipline: The Art & Practice of the Learning Organization. Doubleday. p. 301. ISBN 0-385-26094-6.
  14. ^ a b Accident description for JL2 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 11 May 2011.
  15. ^ a b "Japan Jetliner Lifted From Bay". Beaver County Times. UPI. 25 November 1968. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  16. ^ "Salvage Of Airliner Is Under Way". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. Reuters. 25 November 1968. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  17. ^ Erwin, Ken (April 1969). "Shiga flies! Salvage Successful: Big Jet Is Saved By Bigge Experts" (PDF). Engineers News. Vol. 28, no. 4. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
  18. ^ a b Sklarewitz, Norman; Pickerell, James (September 1969). "Big Ambulance For Big Birds". Popular Mechanics. Vol. 132, no. 3. The Hearst Corporation. pp. 124–127, 208. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
  19. ^ "Flight International 5 Dec 1968". Flight International. December 5, 1968. Retrieved May 11, 2011.
  20. ^ "Jet Repairs Slight". The Virgin Islands Daily News. 29 November 1968. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  21. ^ a b Hartlaub, Peter (20 April 2011). "The Japan Air Lines miracle water landing of 1968 (photos)". SFGate [BLOG]. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  22. ^ a b c "Japanese Jetliner Back In Service". Toledo Blade. AP. 28 May 1969. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  23. ^ "Japanese Pilot 'Getting a Rest'". Eugene Register-Guard. UPI. 13 December 1968. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  24. ^ "(JL) JAL 2 Flight Status". FlightStats. 11 October 2016. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  25. ^ "FAA Registry (N808AX)". Federal Aviation Administration.

External links edit

japan, lines, flight, scheduled, passenger, flight, november, 1968, plane, douglas, named, shiga, 志賀, flying, from, tokyo, international, airport, haneda, francisco, international, airport, heavy, other, factors, captain, kohei, asoh, mistakenly, ditched, plan. Japan Air Lines Flight 2 was a scheduled passenger flight on November 22 1968 2 The plane was a new Douglas DC 8 62 named Shiga 志賀 flying from Tokyo International Airport Haneda to San Francisco International Airport SFO Due to heavy fog and other factors Captain Kohei Asoh mistakenly ditched the plane near Coyote Point in the shallow waters of San Francisco Bay two and a half miles short of the runway 3 4 All 107 people on board survived the accident without any injuries Japan Air Lines Flight 2Japan Airlines Flight 2 in the water short of the runway at San Francisco International AirportAccidentDateNovember 22 1968 1968 11 22 1724 24 UTC 9 24 a m PST SummaryAccidental ditching on approach due to pilot errorSiteSan Francisco Bay San Mateo County California United States 37 35 25 N 122 18 19 W 37 59028 N 122 30528 W 37 59028 122 30528 1 7 AircraftAircraft typeDouglas DC 8 62OperatorJapan AirlinesIATA flight No JL2ICAO flight No JAL2Call signJAPAN AIR 2RegistrationJA8032Flight originTokyo International AirportDestinationSan Francisco International AirportOccupants107Passengers96Crew11Fatalities0Injuries0Survivors107 all Contents 1 Flight 2 Investigation 2 1 The Asoh defense 3 Aftermath 3 1 Aircraft later history 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksFlight editFlight 2 was scheduled to depart Tokyo at 5 p m 08 00 UTC on Friday November 22 and land in San Francisco at 10 15 a m 17 15 UTC 5 Actual departure was delayed to 5 36 p m 08 36 UTC due to required maintenance on the pilot s instrument panel which was providing inconsistent altitude readings 1 3 Command of the flight fell to Captain Kohei Asoh 46 accompanied in the cockpit by first officer Captain Joseph Hazen 34 flight engineer Richard Fahning 40 and navigator Ichiryo Suzuki 27 1 8 10 The flight was conducted without incident over the next eight hours 1 3 The aircraft serial number was 45954 built May 18 1962 and delivered on May 27 It was equipped with four Pratt amp Whitney JT3D 3B engines which had a total operating time of 17 07 54 hours 1 10 As it approached its destination JAL002 was picked up by local radar in Oakland at 8 54 a m 16 54 UTC when 169 nmi 313 km 194 mi on the 257th radial from the Oakland Vortac and the aircraft was cleared for landing at SFO via a waypoint 21 mi 34 km west of the Woodside Vortac station at an altitude of 8 000 ft 2 400 m 1 3 Oakland TRACON advised the pilots that local visibility at SFO was 3 4 mi 1 2 km and the runway visual range exceeded 6 000 ft 1 800 m recommending the flight to hold 1 3 Commanding pilot Captain Kohei Asoh attempted an automatic coupled Instrument Landing System ILS approach due to the heavy fog 1 5 which he had never done before on a recorded DC 8 62 flight 1 9 JAL002 had started descending from its cruising altitude of 37 000 ft 11 000 m at 8 59 a m 16 59 UTC passing through 13 000 ft 4 000 m approximately eleven minutes later when Oakland TRACON provided an update on runway visual range at SFO which had fallen to 3 500 ft 1 100 m 1 4 JAL002 continued its descent as air traffic control was handed over to Bay TRACON while close to the Woodside Vortac the pilot reported an altitude of 8 000 ft 2 400 m at 9 12 54 3 a m 17 12 54 3 UTC then 6 500 ft 2 000 m at 9 14 11 3 a m 17 14 11 3 UTC 1 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 3km2miles nbsp nbsp Landing sitenear Coyote Point nbsp Start of Runway 28L Key locations for JAL002 JA8032 November 22 1968 Less than a minute later Captain Asoh requested that due to the weather at San Francisco we d like a long final approach rather than direct to the outer marker which would put the aircraft 6 mi 9 7 km to the east of the original landing path marker and provide a straighter approach to the runway 1 4 Under the ILS approach the autopilot and flight director would be used to control the aircraft s heading and altitude 1 5 At 9 16 a m 17 16 UTC Bay TRACON instructed Captain Asoh to descend to and maintain 4 000 ft 1 200 m altitude and turn left to a heading of 040 while holding at an airspeed of 180 kn 330 km h 210 mph 1 4 Updates were made to the flight s heading and altitude in response to air traffic control and the final approach was commanded at 9 20 44 a m when Bay TRACON instructed JAL002 to make a left turn and assume a heading of 280 as they passed through the localizer in accordance with the ILS approach 1 4 Once the localizer was captured Captain Asoh moved the autopilot selector from VOR LOC to ILS and slowed the plane to 160 kn 300 km h 180 mph in accordance with instructions from the ground he used the radio direction indicator as the primary instrument for the approach rather than the glide slope deviation indicator which was fluctuating at the time 1 5 In addition because his pressure altimeter had been replaced prior to the start of the flight Captain Asoh did not trust its readings especially since it continued to disagree with the copilot s instrument indicating a brief climb each time the aircraft had leveled off during the flight 1 6 The cloud ceiling was 300 ft 91 m 1 12 and there was little contrast between the sky and the calm waters of the bay As a result during the final descent the too low altitude was not recognized in time to correct it before hitting the water Captain Asoh had set his minimum descent altitude alert to 211 ft 64 m the alert was triggered by the radio altimeter as the pressure altimeter was reading 300 ft 91 m at the time as Captain Asoh checked for runway lights copilot Captain Hazen called out visual updates we are breaking out of the overcast I cannot see the runway light we are too low pull up pull up 1 6 7 Captain Asoh later stated that he realized the plane was too low once he spotted the water after the plane broke through the fog with an air speed of 177 mi h 285 km h He grabbed the control stick to gain altitude and advanced the throttles in anticipation of having to abort the landing and perform a go around but the plane s main landing gear had already struck the water 6 first right then left approximately 2 1 2 mi 4 0 km short of Runway 28L The plane landed in the water at approximately 9 24 25 a m 1724 25 UTC 1 7 Passenger Walter Dunbar recalled We came in alongside the mountains and went into thick fog The next thing I knew we were about one foot off the water She hit skipped twice then nosed up 5 nbsp Coyote Point Marina Yacht Harbor 2021 where passengers disembarked from rafts An early report from the Coast Guard stated the aircraft came to rest upside down 7 In fact the plane came to rest on the Bay floor in shallow water approximately 7 feet 2 1 m deep 8 leaving the forward exits above the waterline 4 The chief purser Kazuo Hashimoto felt there was no panic amongst passengers after landing and tried to make an announcement with the public address PA system Since the PA system had failed after the landing he ended up shouting from the forward cabin for passengers to Be quiet the plane has reached the bottom of the sea It will not sink Do not worry we are well fixed for evacuation 9 The passengers and crew all evacuated the plane on lifeboats which were towed by police and Coast Guard boats to the nearby Coyote Point Yacht Harbor Captain Asoh was the last to leave 6 Asoh returned to the plane after ensuring everyone was safely ashore to gather and return the passengers personal belongings 8 After the incident the US National Transportation Safety Board NTSB stated it was the first successful ditching of a jetliner since the inauguration of jet service a The landing may have been assisted by the unusually high tide of 7 feet 2 1 m compared with the typical water level of 4 feet 1 2 m leading South San Francisco fire chief John Marchi to declare the ditching a one in a million shot as the increased depth gave sufficient cushioning while being shallow enough that exit doors would remain above the water 8 Investigation edit The probable cause of this accident was the improper application of the prescribed procedures to execute an automatic coupled ILS approach This deviation from the prescribed procedures was in part due to a lack of familiarization and infrequent operation of the installed flight director and autopilot system NTSB Report AAR 70 02 4 Captain Asoh was a veteran pilot who had flown with Japan Air Lines for 14 years in 1968 with roughly 10 000 hours of flight time 6 1 000 of them on DC 8s During World War II he served as a flight instructor for the Japanese military 2 His first officer Captain Joseph Hazen had similar flight experience and served in the Marine Corps before flying for Air America from 1961 to 1968 11 Captain Asoh had 1 062 hours of flight time in the DC 8 while Captain Hazen had 18 1 9 After becoming familiarized with the DC 8 62 in April 1968 Captain Asoh piloted approximately one round trip from Tokyo to San Francisco and back via Honolulu per month starting in July 1 9 At the time Captain Asoh stated through a translator that the plane was fully automatic and he couldn t say what was wrong to cause the water landing because he had been in contact with the control tower during the entire approach and was never informed he had deviated from the flight path 6 According to the NTSB report Captain Asoh failed to follow the published Japan Airlines procedures to perform an autopilot controlled descent from the Woodside Vortac and subsequent automatic coupled approach on ILS Had the procedure been followed the localizer first would be coupled then the flight director autopilot coupling system would permit the glide slope to be captured According to his statement Captain Asoh did not set the autopilot for ILS capture until the aircraft had descended to an altitude of 2 500 ft 760 m when it was already below the required glide slope In cockpit instruments then should have been sufficient to warn the crew more than three minutes before the water landing 1 26 Other JAL crews reported they were not trained in the use of the Sperry Flight Director System resulting in revisions to the training program for flight crews 1 27 In addition the language barrier between the commanding pilot and first officer could have been a contributing cause as there was apparently insufficient understanding coordination and confidence between crewmembers that the pilot flying the aircraft reacts to the other pilot s calls in a manner much the same as if he himself is looking through the other s eyes 1 27 The Asoh defense edit When asked by the NTSB about the landing Captain Asoh reportedly replied As you Americans say I fucked up 2 In his 1988 book The Abilene Paradox author Jerry B Harvey termed this frank acceptance of blame the Asoh defense 12 and the story and term have been taken up by a number of other management theorists 13 Aftermath edit nbsp The aircraft was later repaired and flew for Okada Air The aircraft was not severely damaged and was recovered 55 hours after the incident 14 15 at high tide after several failed earlier attempts to hoist it out of the water 16 Bigge Drayage Company recovered the airplane using four crane barges the primary lift was handled by two Smith Rice 90 ton Dravo revolving cranes under the wings while two Healy Tibbitts 50 ton cranes were positioned fore and aft to maintain the balance of the aircraft as it was lifted from the water Because the tail had flooded the aft crane performed the first lift to allow water to drain and 20 000 US gal 76 000 L 17 000 imp gal of fresh water were used to rinse that section after 35 to 40 short tons 32 to 36 t of saltwater had been removed The forward crane was held in standby in case the load shifted due to movement of liquids inside the plane 17 A rig designed by Albert Kelly named Air International Recovery A I R was used during the salvage equipped with lifting beams under each wing and a cradle for the nose 18 After being sprayed down with 20 000 US gallons 76 000 L 17 000 imp gal of fresh water it was transported to the airport on a 150 foot 46 m barge 19 After being transported to the airport Shiga rolled off the barge on its own landing gear 18 External damage was extremely minor as it had been noted that the only part of external equipment damaged on the aircraft was the right gear bogie as one wheel had been sheared off when the plane ditched 15 Further inspections revealed only slight structural damage with repairs estimated to take less than six months 20 United Airlines offered JAL to refurbish and repair the aircraft for US 4 000 000 equivalent to 33 230 000 in 2023 to which Japan Airlines agreed and the aircraft was fixed and refurbished over a period of half a year 21 22 The aircraft was returned to JAL on March 31 1969 14 and underwent a successful test flight on April 11 1969 from San Francisco to Honolulu 22 It was later renamed Hidaka 日高 and continued in service to JAL until 1983 Asoh was temporarily barred from passenger planes 23 demoted to First Officer went through further ground training 22 and continued to fly for JAL until his retirement Hazen also returned to flying a few months later By 1973 Japan Air Lines was using Boeing 747 aircraft on the Tokyo to San Francisco route 21 Today Japan Airlines still operates a route named Flight 2 JAL002 from Haneda to San Francisco currently using the Boeing 777 300ER or Boeing 787 9 24 Aircraft later history edit JA8032 was sold to Air ABC registration TF BBF then to Okada Air registration 5N AON and finally flew as an express freighter for Airborne Express registration N808AX 25 before being decommissioned and scrapped at Wilmington Air Park ILN in December 2001 2 See also edit nbsp San Francisco Bay Area portal nbsp Aviation portal nbsp Japan portal nbsp 1960s portal Japan Air Lines Flight 350 a DC 8 which ditched in Tokyo Bay short of Haneda in 1982 Scandinavian Airlines System Flight 933 a DC 8 which ditched in Santa Monica Bay short of LAX in 1969Notes edit This was not the first successful ditching of a jetliner since the inauguration of jet service The first was Aeroflot Flight 366 a Tupolev Tu 124 which took place on 21 August 1963 The aircraft ran out of fuel and ditched in the Neva River Soviet Union All 52 people on board that flight survived and sustained no injuries 10 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Aircraft Accident Report Japan Airlines Co Ltd DC 8 62 JA 8032 San Francisco Bay San Francisco California PDF Report National Transportation Safety Board December 31 1969 Retrieved 11 April 2022 a b c d Splashdown of the Shiga Check Six com Retrieved May 11 2011 Silagi Richard March 9 2001 The DC 8 that was too young to die Airliners net Archived from the original on March 24 2016 Retrieved August 25 2016 a b c NTSB Aircraft Accident Report AAR 70 02 National Transportation Safety Board Archived from the original on January 1 2015 Retrieved 12 October 2016 a b JAL jet ends up in bay 107 safe Honolulu Star Bulletin UPI November 22 1968 Retrieved 11 April 2022 a b c d 107 On Board Uninjured As Jetliner Lands In Bay Toledo Blade AP 22 November 1968 Retrieved 12 October 2016 Jetliner Crashes Into Bay Reading Eagle UPI 22 November 1968 Retrieved 12 October 2016 a b c High Tide Cushioned Japan Air Line Crash The Day New London Connecticut AP 23 November 1968 Retrieved 12 October 2016 Thackrey Donald B 23 November 1968 No One Panicked in Bay Landing Eugene Register Guard UPI Retrieved 12 October 2016 The Soviet Transport Database scramble nl 27 February 2018 Archived from the original on 27 February 2018 Retrieved 16 August 2022 Joseph William Joe Hazen 1934 2020 The Seattle Times April 18 2020 Retrieved 11 April 2022 Harvey Jerry B 1988 The Abilene Paradox and Other Meditations on Management Wiley ISBN 9780669191790 Senge Peter M 1990 The Fifth Discipline The Art amp Practice of the Learning Organization Doubleday p 301 ISBN 0 385 26094 6 a b Accident description for JL2 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 11 May 2011 a b Japan Jetliner Lifted From Bay Beaver County Times UPI 25 November 1968 Retrieved 12 October 2016 Salvage Of Airliner Is Under Way Sarasota Herald Tribune Reuters 25 November 1968 Retrieved 12 October 2016 Erwin Ken April 1969 Shiga flies Salvage Successful Big Jet Is Saved By Bigge Experts PDF Engineers News Vol 28 no 4 Retrieved 7 April 2022 a b Sklarewitz Norman Pickerell James September 1969 Big Ambulance For Big Birds Popular Mechanics Vol 132 no 3 The Hearst Corporation pp 124 127 208 Retrieved 7 April 2022 Flight International 5 Dec 1968 Flight International December 5 1968 Retrieved May 11 2011 Jet Repairs Slight The Virgin Islands Daily News 29 November 1968 Retrieved 12 October 2016 a b Hartlaub Peter 20 April 2011 The Japan Air Lines miracle water landing of 1968 photos SFGate BLOG Retrieved 12 October 2016 a b c Japanese Jetliner Back In Service Toledo Blade AP 28 May 1969 Retrieved 12 October 2016 Japanese Pilot Getting a Rest Eugene Register Guard UPI 13 December 1968 Retrieved 12 October 2016 JL JAL 2 Flight Status FlightStats 11 October 2016 Retrieved 12 October 2016 FAA Registry N808AX Federal Aviation Administration External links edit Aircraft Accident Report Japan Airlines Co Ltd DC 8 62 JA 8032 San Francisco Bay San Francisco California November 22 1968 PDF NTSB National Transportation Safety Board 1969 12 31 via Embry Riddle Aeronautical University Profile page Photograph in Flight International Dec 5 1968 showing the aircraft being lifted out of the water Smooth Landings and Stupid Travel News Bigge pulled Japan Air Shiga out of San Francisco Bay 1968 on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japan Air Lines Flight 2 amp oldid 1219096015, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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