Braniff International Airways Flight 250
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Braniff International Airways Flight 250 crashed near Falls City, Nebraska, on August 6, 1966, en route to Omaha from Kansas City, Missouri.[1][2] Thirty-eight passengers and four crew members were killed in the crash, which occurred in a farm field late on a Saturday night.[3][4][5] In-flight structural failure due to extreme turbulence in an avoidable weather hazard was cited as the cause.[6][7]
Aircraft
The aircraft was a BAC 1-11-203AE, registration N1553[8]. It was manufactured by British Aircraft Corporation in December 1965.[6][9]
Flight crew
The cockpit crew consisted of Captain Donald Pauly, 47, and First Officer James Hilliker, 39.
Captain Pauly was highly experienced with 20,767 flying hours, 549 of which were in the BAC-1-11. He possessed type ratings in other aircraft including the DC-3, DC-6, DC-7, and the Convair family.
First Officer Hilliker was less experienced, with 9,269 flying hours, 685 in the BAC-1-11. According to the NTSB report, he had two type ratings in the BAC-1-11 and the Convair family.[6][10]
Flight
(All times Central Standard Time (UTC–6); Daylight time was used only in Minnesota along the flight's route until 1967.)
Flight 250 was operated by Braniff between New Orleans and Minneapolis with stops in between at Shreveport, Fort Smith, Tulsa, Kansas City, and Omaha.[4] It departed Kansas City at 22:55 on an IFR clearance to Omaha at FL200 (Script error: No such module "convert".). However, the crew asked if they could remain at Script error: No such module "convert". because of the weather. The flight remained at Script error: No such module "convert". until permission was received at 23:06 to descend to 5,000 feet.[6] At 23:08, the crew contacted a Braniff flight that had just departed Omaha's Eppley Airfield, which reported moderate to light turbulence.
About four minutes later, Flight 250 entered an updraft within an area of active squall line of severe thunderstorms. The 1-11 violently accelerated upward and in a left roll. At this time the right tailplane and the vertical stabilizer failed.[6] The aircraft then pitched nose down and within one or two seconds the right wing failed as well. The plane tumbled down in flames until entering a flat spin before impacting the ground, approximately midway between Kansas City and Omaha. The probable cause was in-flight structural failure caused by extreme turbulence during operation of the aircraft in an area of avoidable hazardous weather.[6]
This was the first fatal crash of a BAC 1-11 in the United States;[11] it occurred in southeast Nebraska in Richardson County on a farm, about Script error: No such module "convert". north-northeast of Falls City, in a soybean field only Script error: No such module "convert". from a farmhouse.[4][11][12][13] The farm owner and his family were returning home in an automobile at the time of impact (23:12), and were about a half-mile (0.8 km) away.[1][3][11] The elevation of the site is approximately Script error: No such module "convert". above sea level.
Investigation
Braniff regulations prohibited a plane from being dispatched into an area with a solid line of thunderstorms; nonetheless, the company forecast was somewhat inaccurate with respect to the number and intensity of thunderstorms and the intensity of the associated turbulence. Braniff dispatchers were aware that their flight 255 had delayed departing Sioux City for Omaha by one hour to allow the storm to pass Omaha; they also knew that their flight 234 from St. Louis to Des Moines had diverted to Kansas City due to the storm. They did not inform the crew of these events believing they were too far from the route of flight 250 to be relevant. The crew was aware of the severe weather, however, and the first officer suggested that they divert around the activity. The captain instead elected to continue the flight into the edges of the squall line.[6]
Dr. Ted Fujita, a renowned weather researcher and professor of meteorology at the University of Chicago, was hired by British Aircraft Corporation, the manufacturer of the BAC 1-11, to study how the weather affected the jet.[14] Dr. Fujita is recognized as the discoverer of downbursts and microbursts and also developed the Fujita scale, which differentiates tornado intensity and links tornado damage with wind speed.
Notably, the accident was the first with a U.S.-registered aircraft in which a cockpit voice recorder (CVR) was used to aid in the investigation. Just before the breakup, the device recorded Captain Pauly instructing First Officer Hilliker to adjust the engine power settings. He was interrupted mid-sentence by buffeting so severe that no more dialog could be discerned on the recording, which continued even after the wings and tail separated from the aircraft. Since the flight data recorder (FDR) was destroyed in the crash,[15] the changes in the buffeting sound would later be used to estimate the airplane's changes in speed and altitude during the accident sequence.
Aftermath
At its fortieth anniversary in 2006, a memorial was placed at the crash site.[3][16] A fiftieth anniversary memorial event,[17] planned by the county's historical society, was attended by a hundred in 2016.[16]
In popular culture
Script error: No such module "Unsubst". This crash is covered in detail in the book Air Disaster (Vol. 1) by Macarthur Job, illustrated by Matthew Tesch, and also in Deadly Turbulence: The Air Safety Lessons of Braniff Flight 250 and Other Airliners, 1959-1966, by Steve Pollock.[18]
The U.S. television drama Mad Men referenced this accident briefly in the season 5 episode "Signal 30". In the series, client Mohawk Airlines also operated the BAC 1-11.[19]
See also
References
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External links
- NTSB brief of the accident National Transportation Safety Board
- DeadlyTurbulence.com - Braniff Flight 250
- BAC 111 N1553 BraniffPages.com
- Braniff 250 Pilotfriend
- Aviation Safety Network - Braniff - N1553
- Nebraska Air Crash - Braniff Airways - Flight 250
Template:Aviation accidents and incidents in 1966 Template:Aviation accidents and incidents in the United States in the 1960s
- Pages with script errors
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- Aviation accidents and incidents in the United States in 1966
- 1966 in Nebraska
- 1966 meteorology
- Aviation accidents and incidents caused by clear air turbulence
- Braniff accidents and incidents
- Airliner accidents and incidents in Nebraska
- Airliner accidents and incidents caused by in-flight structural failure
- Airliner accidents and incidents caused by weather
- Disasters in Nebraska
- Accidents and incidents involving the BAC One-Eleven
- Richardson County, Nebraska
- August 1966 in the United States