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Santa Bárbara Airlines Flight 518

Santa Bárbara Airlines Flight 518 was an ATR 42–300 twin-turboprop aircraft, registration YV1449, operating as a scheduled domestic flight from Mérida, Venezuela, to Caracas that crashed into the side of a mountain on 21 February 2008, shortly after take-off.[1][2] There were 43 passengers on board, with a crew consisting of two pilots and a flight attendant.[3] The wreckage was discovered a day later with no survivors.[4] It was the deadliest aviation accident involving an ATR 42 until Trigana Air Flight 267 crashed in Papua, Indonesia, in 2015 with 54 deaths.[5]

Santa Bárbara Airlines Flight 518
YV1449, the aircraft involved in the accident, four days before the crash
Accident
Date21 February 2008 (2008-02-21)
SummaryControlled flight into terrain due to pilot error and navigational error
SiteNorthwest of Alberto Carnevalli Airport, Mérida, Venezuela
8°39′33″N 71°14′17″W / 8.65917°N 71.23806°W / 8.65917; -71.23806Coordinates: 8°39′33″N 71°14′17″W / 8.65917°N 71.23806°W / 8.65917; -71.23806
Aircraft
Aircraft typeATR 42-300
OperatorSanta Bárbara Airlines
IATA flight No.S3518
ICAO flight No.BBR518
Call signSANTA BARBARA 518
RegistrationYV1449
Flight originAlberto Carnevalli Airport, Mérida, Venezuela
DestinationSimón Bolívar International Airport, Caracas, Venezuela
Occupants46
Passengers43
Crew3
Fatalities46
Survivors0

Flight history

Mérida, a university and tourist town located high in the Andes mountains, is surrounded by higher terrain with night flights prohibited at the nearby Alberto Carnevalli Airport. On 21 February 2008, Flight 518 was the last scheduled flight out of the airport, departing at about 17:00 local time. On the flight deck was Captain Aldino Garanito Gomez (36), a senior pilot for the airline and flight instructor with more than 5,000 flight hours logged, and First Officer Denis Ferreira Quintal (29), who had more than 2,000 flight hours.

Shortly after take-off, the twin-turboprop slammed into a sheer 4,000-metre (13,000 ft) rock wall called "Indian Face" (Spanish: La Cara del Indio). No distress calls were received from the aircraft prior to impact.[6][7]

Crash site

 
 
class=notpageimage|
Accident location shown within Venezuela

Antonio Rivero, national director of civil defense, said rescuers had identified the site of the crash in the south-western state of Mérida. Civil defense regional chief Gerardo Rojas stated that rescue crews were racing to the poorly-accessible crash site in the Andes Mountains.[8] Mountain villagers reported hearing a tremendous noise they thought could be from a crash soon after the disappearance and loss of contact with Flight 518. According to local police, the wreckage of the aircraft was located at Páramo de Mucuchíes, in the sector of Collao del Cóndor, Páramo Piedra Blanca, near the Laguna de la Perlada. The search operation was conducted from the regional hub city of Barinas in western Venezuela.

Air-rescue services said that the airliner crashed 10 kilometres (6 mi) from the mountain city of Mérida after take-off. Searchers spotted the wreckage of the plane carrying 43 passengers and 3 crew members in the mountains of western Venezuela on Friday, 22 February 2008. Fire-fighter Sgt. Jhonny Paz said officials believed there were no survivors and were sending a helicopter to the site of the accident after a refueling stop. "The impact was direct. The aircraft is practically pulverized," he told the Venezuelan television station Globovisión.[9] At the national civil aeronautical institute, General Ramón Vinas confirmed that, "by the type of impact, we presume that there are no survivors".[10]

Passengers

As search-and-rescue activities were underway, local media published the passenger list of Sánta Barbara Airlines Flight 518.[11] Most of the victims were Venezuelan; five Colombians and an American also died in the crash.[12]

Family members and friends of the victims created a website with information related to the crash and its victims.[13]

Fatalities
Nationality Passengers Crew Total
Venezuela 37 3 40
Colombia 5 0 5
United States 1 0 1
Total 43 3 46

Investigation

The Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR/"black box") was successfully recovered from the wreckage. Preliminary information released on 28 July 2008, indicates the crew departed Mérida with inoperative navigation equipment and subsequently became disoriented in the mountainous terrain surrounding the airport, crashing into the side of a mountain[14] while trying to determine their location.[15] Subsequent investigation concluded that the pilots took off without conducting the mandatory pre-flight procedures and used an unauthorised departure route.

A report by LagAd Aviation determined that the cause of the accident was the omission or improper use of the checklists and procedures critical to the operation of the flight, causing the Attitude and Heading Reference System (AHRS) to not be initialized prior to the take-off roll. The pilots wanted to meet the schedule after experiencing some delays, including losing track of time while having coffee in the terminal, then finding that the passengers were already on board the plane. The time pressure was a factor that led the pilots to omit the use of the checklists and perform the pre-takeoff so fast that it was impossible to perform the necessary verification procedures to ensure safety. The second cause of the accident was the decision to take off when they had already become aware that the AHRS was inoperative, due to the overconfidence of the pilots, as the captain had avoided catastrophe on a previous flight when proceeding without AHRS from the same airport.[15] From the moment power is turned on, the aircraft must sit stationary for 180 seconds for the AHRS to synchronize its settings, which is not an issue given how long the pilots will take to complete their checklists; instead, these pilots rushed their checklist, skipped some steps, and knowingly chose to begin their take-off rather than wait an additional 28 seconds for the AHRS to be synchronized.[16] Flying without the AHRS meant that the pilots could not maintain the correct heading in the limited visibility of clouds on their ascent.[17]

Cockpit voice recording

The following is an English translation of the CVR transcript (original in Spanish):[15][18]

Television portrayal

The crash of Flight 518 was covered in "28 Seconds To Survive", a Season 12 (2013) episode of the internationally syndicated Canadian TV documentary series Mayday.[16] The documentary points out that the crash led authorities to deem the airport too dangerous for commercial flights, which were suspended. Commercial service resumed in 2014, after being suspended for five years.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident ATR 42-300 YV1449 Mérida-A Carnevalli Airport (MRD)". aviation-safety.net. Aviation Safety Network.
  2. ^ "Jetliner reported missing in Venezuela". CNN. 22 February 2008. Retrieved 22 February 2008.
  3. ^ . 21 February 2008. Archived from the original on 15 March 2008. Retrieved 21 February 2008.
  4. ^ . Agence France Presse (AFP). 22 February 2008. Archived from the original on 15 October 2008. Retrieved 22 February 2008.
  5. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident ATR 42-300 PK-YRN Oksibil Airport (OKL)". aviation-safety.net. Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  6. ^ "Rescuers find Venezuela plane crash black boxes". Reuters. 24 February 2008. Retrieved 28 February 2008.
  7. ^ "Venezuela begins recovering bodies from Andean plane crash". The New York Times. Associated Press. 24 February 2008. Retrieved 28 February 2008.
  8. ^ "Wreckage of Venezuelan airliner spotted". Thaindian.com. 22 February 2008. Retrieved 22 February 2008.
  9. ^ . Associated Press. 22 February 2008. Archived from the original on 25 February 2008. Retrieved 28 February 2008.
  10. ^ Rueda, Jorge (22 February 2008). . The Associated Press. washingtonpost.com. Archived from the original on 4 November 2012. Retrieved 24 February 2008.
  11. ^ . laverdad.com. 22 February 2008. Archived from the original on 25 February 2008. Retrieved 22 February 2008.
  12. ^ "Venezuela crash data boxes found." BBC, 23 February 2008. Retrieved on 28 February 2008.
  13. ^ "Vuelo 518" [Flight 518] (in Spanish). Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  14. ^ Illustration of flight paths
  15. ^ a b c Transcriben conversación de Caja Negra de vuelo de Mérida 9 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine [Transcript of conversation of Merida flight's black box] (in Spanish)
  16. ^ a b "28 Seconds To Survive". Mayday. Season 12. Episode 12. Cineflix. 1 April 2013. Discovery Channel Canada.
  17. ^ "Análisis del Accidente del Vuelo 518 de Santa Bárbara Airlines" [Analysis of the Santa Barbara Airlines Flight 518 Accident] (in Spanish). Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  18. ^ CVR audio ()

External links

External images
  "ATR-42-300 YV1449" pictures from jetphotos.net
  "ATR-42-300 YV1449" pictures from myaviation.net
  • (in Spanish) Vuelo 518 Santa Bárbara
  • (in Spanish) "REPUBLICA BOLIVARIANA DE VENEZUELA TRIBUNAL TERCERO DE PRIMERA INSTANCIA EN FUNCIONES DE CONTROL." ()

santa, bárbara, airlines, flight, twin, turboprop, aircraft, registration, yv1449, operating, scheduled, domestic, flight, from, mérida, venezuela, caracas, that, crashed, into, side, mountain, february, 2008, shortly, after, take, there, were, passengers, boa. Santa Barbara Airlines Flight 518 was an ATR 42 300 twin turboprop aircraft registration YV1449 operating as a scheduled domestic flight from Merida Venezuela to Caracas that crashed into the side of a mountain on 21 February 2008 shortly after take off 1 2 There were 43 passengers on board with a crew consisting of two pilots and a flight attendant 3 The wreckage was discovered a day later with no survivors 4 It was the deadliest aviation accident involving an ATR 42 until Trigana Air Flight 267 crashed in Papua Indonesia in 2015 with 54 deaths 5 Santa Barbara Airlines Flight 518YV1449 the aircraft involved in the accident four days before the crashAccidentDate21 February 2008 2008 02 21 SummaryControlled flight into terrain due to pilot error and navigational errorSiteNorthwest of Alberto Carnevalli Airport Merida Venezuela 8 39 33 N 71 14 17 W 8 65917 N 71 23806 W 8 65917 71 23806 Coordinates 8 39 33 N 71 14 17 W 8 65917 N 71 23806 W 8 65917 71 23806AircraftAircraft typeATR 42 300OperatorSanta Barbara AirlinesIATA flight No S3518ICAO flight No BBR518Call signSANTA BARBARA 518RegistrationYV1449Flight originAlberto Carnevalli Airport Merida VenezuelaDestinationSimon Bolivar International Airport Caracas VenezuelaOccupants46Passengers43Crew3Fatalities46Survivors0 Contents 1 Flight history 2 Crash site 3 Passengers 4 Investigation 5 Cockpit voice recording 6 Television portrayal 7 References 8 External linksFlight history EditMerida a university and tourist town located high in the Andes mountains is surrounded by higher terrain with night flights prohibited at the nearby Alberto Carnevalli Airport On 21 February 2008 Flight 518 was the last scheduled flight out of the airport departing at about 17 00 local time On the flight deck was Captain Aldino Garanito Gomez 36 a senior pilot for the airline and flight instructor with more than 5 000 flight hours logged and First Officer Denis Ferreira Quintal 29 who had more than 2 000 flight hours Shortly after take off the twin turboprop slammed into a sheer 4 000 metre 13 000 ft rock wall called Indian Face Spanish La Cara del Indio No distress calls were received from the aircraft prior to impact 6 7 Crash site Edit class notpageimage Accident location shown within Venezuela Antonio Rivero national director of civil defense said rescuers had identified the site of the crash in the south western state of Merida Civil defense regional chief Gerardo Rojas stated that rescue crews were racing to the poorly accessible crash site in the Andes Mountains 8 Mountain villagers reported hearing a tremendous noise they thought could be from a crash soon after the disappearance and loss of contact with Flight 518 According to local police the wreckage of the aircraft was located at Paramo de Mucuchies in the sector of Collao del Condor Paramo Piedra Blanca near the Laguna de la Perlada The search operation was conducted from the regional hub city of Barinas in western Venezuela Air rescue services said that the airliner crashed 10 kilometres 6 mi from the mountain city of Merida after take off Searchers spotted the wreckage of the plane carrying 43 passengers and 3 crew members in the mountains of western Venezuela on Friday 22 February 2008 Fire fighter Sgt Jhonny Paz said officials believed there were no survivors and were sending a helicopter to the site of the accident after a refueling stop The impact was direct The aircraft is practically pulverized he told the Venezuelan television station Globovision 9 At the national civil aeronautical institute General Ramon Vinas confirmed that by the type of impact we presume that there are no survivors 10 Passengers EditAs search and rescue activities were underway local media published the passenger list of Santa Barbara Airlines Flight 518 11 Most of the victims were Venezuelan five Colombians and an American also died in the crash 12 Family members and friends of the victims created a website with information related to the crash and its victims 13 Fatalities Nationality Passengers Crew TotalVenezuela 37 3 40Colombia 5 0 5United States 1 0 1Total 43 3 46Investigation EditThe Cockpit Voice Recorder CVR black box was successfully recovered from the wreckage Preliminary information released on 28 July 2008 indicates the crew departed Merida with inoperative navigation equipment and subsequently became disoriented in the mountainous terrain surrounding the airport crashing into the side of a mountain 14 while trying to determine their location 15 Subsequent investigation concluded that the pilots took off without conducting the mandatory pre flight procedures and used an unauthorised departure route A report by LagAd Aviation determined that the cause of the accident was the omission or improper use of the checklists and procedures critical to the operation of the flight causing the Attitude and Heading Reference System AHRS to not be initialized prior to the take off roll The pilots wanted to meet the schedule after experiencing some delays including losing track of time while having coffee in the terminal then finding that the passengers were already on board the plane The time pressure was a factor that led the pilots to omit the use of the checklists and perform the pre takeoff so fast that it was impossible to perform the necessary verification procedures to ensure safety The second cause of the accident was the decision to take off when they had already become aware that the AHRS was inoperative due to the overconfidence of the pilots as the captain had avoided catastrophe on a previous flight when proceeding without AHRS from the same airport 15 From the moment power is turned on the aircraft must sit stationary for 180 seconds for the AHRS to synchronize its settings which is not an issue given how long the pilots will take to complete their checklists instead these pilots rushed their checklist skipped some steps and knowingly chose to begin their take off rather than wait an additional 28 seconds for the AHRS to be synchronized 16 Flying without the AHRS meant that the pilots could not maintain the correct heading in the limited visibility of clouds on their ascent 17 Cockpit voice recording EditThe following is an English translation of the CVR transcript original in Spanish 15 18 Transcript of CVR Including Communication with Air Traffic ControlSpeaker DialogTWR Tower CAM 1 Captain CAM 2 Copilot ROI116 Avior 1116 a nearby flight GPWS Ground Proximity Warning SystemCAM 2 Merida Tower good afternoon Santa Barbara 518 is requesting startup and clearance for proposed flight to Maiquetia tower 518 TWR 518 once doors closed startup is approved altimeter 1018 Be advised a B190 of Avior two minutes ago checked over Lagunillas CAM 2 Roger with Avior via Lagunillas QNH 1018 startup clearance received and doors closing and expecting taxi clearance to runway 24 Santa Barbara 518 CAM 1 If possible keep on the concrete ramp CAM 2 Merida Barbara 518 requests 180 turn to stay on the concrete CAM 1 If possible keep on the concrete ramp TWR Standby for immediate taxi and Avior s position TWR Avior 1116 Merida position ROI1116 We are 8 miles out confirming 8 miles outside Lagunillas through 110 to 9 thousand feet No problem you can clear the Barbara and we ll contact you inbound TWR So we ll clear for takeoff BBR 518 while you contact us when inbound TWR Barbara 518 expedite your taxi to runway 24 and contact when ready for takeoff CAM 2 Expediting taxi to runway 24 and we ll call when ready for takeoff Santa Barbara 518 CAM 1 Look at this shit CAM 2 Clearance for Santa Barbara 518 TWR We are still waiting on the clearance CAM 1 It s going to be a hell this shit We ll have to reset it during flight what a crap CAM 2 We ll go visualCAM 1 We ll take off in the dark Fuck We didn t see this shit I won t touch it these gyros are fucked up again The other day we also skipped this and we had to leave them like this TWR Barbara 518 Maiquetia cleared you to 190 direct airport 1655 CAM 2 Maiquetia Center clears Barbara 518 to Maiquetia W8 1 9 0 transponder 1655 Barbara 518 180 ready for departure TWR Roger winds 220 at 08 cleared for takeoff CAM 2 Cleared for takeoff Runway 24 Santa Barbara 518 CAM 1 We can t see shit if we can fix it we ll go visual We ll fix it in flight CAM 1 We re ready to go you have the controls if you want CAM 1 Power set positiveCAM 2 Gear up We re upTWR Avior 1116 Traffic airborne right now ROI1116 Roger 1116 is inbound over Lagunillas CAM 1 Roger And as complementary information from us we ll be a bit closer to the northern mountains my friend so you ll have a chance ROI1116 Roger my friend so we ll keep closer to the southern mountains CAM 1 Go ahead CAM 2 Let s keep white bugs 10CAM 1 The same shit of the other day CAM 2 The units are fucked up CAM 1 The last time was like this we had to wait until CAM 2 Level at 400 feetCAM 1 We re visualCAM 1 LevelCAM 1 If you want we can start to turn Denis CAM 1 This way it s betterCAM 1 I passed by here Laughs CAM 1 Let s keep this heading Ok And let s try to keep 141 Denis CAM 2 Ok CAM 2 And manual CAM 1 Turn a bit more to see if this compass works and keep it right there CAM 1 Let it there CAM 1 Denis a bit more to the right CAM 2 To the right CAM 1 Yes get to zero six seven 067 CAM 2 Zero seven three 073 GPWS Sounds CAM 1 Denis Denis The captain takes control of the airplane CAM 2 We re at 074 aren t we CAM 2 360 TWR 518 Airborne 2 9 contact over Observatory Did I clear you GPWS sounds again CAM 2 That s correct sir GPWS sounds again GPWS sounds again CAM 2 Aldino Aldino Go that way are we at CAM 2 Aldino Aldino we re at 318 not 17 Aldino Aldino GPWS sounds again CAM 2 Aldino shit we re at 318 CAM 1 What the fuck do you want Turn to the right GPWS sounds again CAM 2 Aldino take that way CAM 1 Fuck Denis For Christ s sake CAM 2 Aldino let s turn 360 backwards We re going down CAM 2 Ok CAM 1 Denis For Christ s sake Stick Shaker Activates CAM 2 Aldino CAM 1 Hold on hold on CAM 1 Easy Denis Easy Sound of Crash Television portrayal EditThe crash of Flight 518 was covered in 28 Seconds To Survive a Season 12 2013 episode of the internationally syndicated Canadian TV documentary series Mayday 16 The documentary points out that the crash led authorities to deem the airport too dangerous for commercial flights which were suspended Commercial service resumed in 2014 after being suspended for five years citation needed References Edit Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident ATR 42 300 YV1449 Merida A Carnevalli Airport MRD aviation safety net Aviation Safety Network Jetliner reported missing in Venezuela CNN 22 February 2008 Retrieved 22 February 2008 Plane Carrying 46 Missing in Venezuela 21 February 2008 Archived from the original on 15 March 2008 Retrieved 21 February 2008 No survivors in Venezuelan plane crash officials Agence France Presse AFP 22 February 2008 Archived from the original on 15 October 2008 Retrieved 22 February 2008 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident ATR 42 300 PK YRN Oksibil Airport OKL aviation safety net Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 1 February 2021 Rescuers find Venezuela plane crash black boxes Reuters 24 February 2008 Retrieved 28 February 2008 Venezuela begins recovering bodies from Andean plane crash The New York Times Associated Press 24 February 2008 Retrieved 28 February 2008 Wreckage of Venezuelan airliner spotted Thaindian com 22 February 2008 Retrieved 22 February 2008 Plane Crash Site in Venezuela Found Associated Press 22 February 2008 Archived from the original on 25 February 2008 Retrieved 28 February 2008 Rueda Jorge 22 February 2008 Venezuela Plane Crash Kills 46 The Associated Press washingtonpost com Archived from the original on 4 November 2012 Retrieved 24 February 2008 Passenger Manifest of Santa Barbara Airlines Flight 508 laverdad com 22 February 2008 Archived from the original on 25 February 2008 Retrieved 22 February 2008 Venezuela crash data boxes found BBC 23 February 2008 Retrieved on 28 February 2008 Vuelo 518 Flight 518 in Spanish Retrieved 31 December 2016 Illustration of flight paths a b c Transcriben conversacion de Caja Negra de vuelo de Merida Archived 9 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine Transcript of conversation of Merida flight s black box in Spanish a b 28 Seconds To Survive Mayday Season 12 Episode 12 Cineflix 1 April 2013 Discovery Channel Canada Analisis del Accidente del Vuelo 518 de Santa Barbara Airlines Analysis of the Santa Barbara Airlines Flight 518 Accident in Spanish Retrieved 31 December 2016 CVR audio Archive External links Edit Wikinews has related news 46 passenger Venezuelan plane reported missing External images ATR 42 300 YV1449 pictures from jetphotos net ATR 42 300 YV1449 pictures from myaviation net in Spanish Vuelo 518 Santa Barbara in Spanish REPUBLICA BOLIVARIANA DE VENEZUELA TRIBUNAL TERCERO DE PRIMERA INSTANCIA EN FUNCIONES DE CONTROL Archive Portals Aviation Venezuela Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Santa Barbara Airlines Flight 518 amp oldid 1117586608, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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