Hockey Plane crash: Drugs and bad braking
The interstate aviation committee has revealed the crew applied the brakes during take off causing a plane crash in Russia that killed 44 people in September. Investigators say the crew had little flight experience in the aircraft model involved - and that this inexperience could have caused the fatal mistake. The second pilot also showed traces of a strong sedative in his system. The findings also said that the pilot was suffering from a condition that affected his movement and coordination. The Yak-42 crashed in September killing most of the Lokomotiv Russian hockey team.
MOSCOW -- A Russian pilot inadvertently put the wheel brakes on
during takeoff, causing a crash that killed 44 people including a
professional ice hockey team, investigators said Wednesday, citing lax
oversight and insufficient crew training as key reasons behind the
error.
The Interstate Aviation Committee said the Sept. 7 crash of
the Yak-42 plane near Yaroslavl in central Russia occurred because one
of the two pilots accidentally activated the brakes and then yanked a
control wheel to his chest, pulling the plane up too sharply in a
desperate attempt to take off.
was one of the worst aviation disasters ever in sports, shocking Russia
and the world of hockey, as the dead included 36 players, coaches and
staff of the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl hockey team. The only player who
survived the crash later died of burns. A flight engineer was the sole
survivor.
Alexei Morozov, leader of the investigation, said the
crew should have aborted the takeoff the moment they realized it was
going wrong. He said one possible reason the pilot obstinately still
tried to take off was a fear of reprisals from his employer.
Industry
experts say when Russian crews abort takeoffs, make second runs or
divert their planes to other airports they can risk losing their bonuses
or face other sanctions as carriers focus on cutting costs.
"Many
pilots say that those who cause delays in flight schedules ... run into
various problems at many carriers," Morozov told a news conference.
"Company management doesn't like it."
Morozov blamed the plane's
owner, Yak-Service, for failing to observe safety standards and
adequately train the crew. The company was closed in September by
Russia's federal aviation authority following a check that found severe
violations.
"The company practically lacked a proper system of flight oversight and controls over air safety," Morozov said.
Morozov
said both pilots had flown another type of plane with a slightly
different cockpit layout and apparently had never learned the correct
position for their feet on takeoff. He said in the Yak-42, like most
other Russian and Western planes now, a pilot steers the aircraft by
pressing the lower part of pedals and activates the brakes by pressing
their upper part.
But instead of putting their heels on the
cockpit floor as regulations require, one or both of the pilots left
their feet resting on the pedals in line with old habits, inadvertently
activating the brakes and slowing the plane down on takeoff.
At first they didn't notice the brakes were on, and then they made the fatal mistake of failing to halt the takeoff, he said.
"A
properly trained pilot would have immediately aborted the takeoff when
he saw the nose failing to lift," said Ruben Yesayan, a highly decorated
test pilot who took part in the probe. "The plane would simply have
rolled past the runway and everyone would have been safe."
Morozov
said the second pilot was taking phenobarbital -- a sedative used to
control seizures that is prohibited for pilots -- and that also
contributed to the disaster. He said the pilot suffered from
polyneuropathy -- a neurological disorder that could affect the feet and
hands and cause weakness and loss of sensation. It had passed unnoticed
during an official medical certification, but investigators found that
the pilot had consulted private doctors about it.