#OnThisDay in 2001, Scandinavian Flight 686 collides with a CitationJet at Milan’s Linate Airport

15 years ago today, Scandinavian Airlines Flight 686 (SE-DMA) was a scheduled passenger flight from Milan’s Linate Airport, Italy to Copenhagen Airport, Denmark. The McDonnell Douglas MD-87 was carrying 104 passengers & 6 crew members. 

sas_md-87_se-dma

SE-DMA the accident aircraft involved taken in 2000.


ACCIDENT

d-cefd

Cessna CitationJet similar to the accident aircraft involved.

A brand new Cessna CitationJet (D-IEVX) operated by Air Evex arrived at Linate Airport in Milan following a flight from Cologne Bonn Airport, Germany. The Cessna was to carry out a return flight to Paris-Le Bourget Airport, carrying two pilots, a Cessna sales manager and a prospective customer.

The plane arrived at 06:59 and was taxied to the General aviation apron, also known as ‘West apron’. It was a foggy morning at Milan and one of the passenger flights parked on the North apron was Scandinavian Airlines Flight 686 scheduled to depart at 07:35.

untitled

At 07:41, the pilot of the MD-87 contacted Linate Ground Control for his engine start clearance, as the boarding of 104 passengers had been completed. The Ground controller cleared the pilot to start engines and advised that the slot time for takeoff of the flight was at 08:16. Thirteen minutes later SAS Flight 686 was cleared to taxi to runway 36R: “Scandinavian 686 taxi to the holding position Cat III, QNH 1013 and please call me back entering the main taxiway.”

A few minutes later, the Cessna pilot requested permission to start the engines. The ground controller then gave start-up clearance. The ground controller then requested SAS Flight 686 to contact the Tower controller. From this moment on the crew of the MD-87 and the crew of the Cessna were tuned on two different radio frequencies. At 08:05 the pilots of the Cessna received taxi clearance: “Delta Victor Xray taxi north via Romeo 5, QNH 1013, call me back at the stop bar of the…. main runway extension.”

artistrenditionofaccident

The pilot acknowledged by saying: “Roger via Romeo 5 and … 1013, and call you back before reaching main runway.” The Cessna started to taxi from the General Aviation parking position, following the yellow taxi line. After reaching the position where the yellow taxi line splits into two diverging directions, the pilot erroneously took the taxi line to the right and entered taxiway R6. At 08:09 The Ground controller cleared the Cessna to continue its taxi on the North apron. At the same time the Tower controller cleared SAS Flight 686 for takeoff: “Scandinavian 686 Linate, cleared for takeoff 36, the wind is clam report rolling, when airborne squawk ident.” The pilot advanced the throttles and acknowledged the clearance: “Clear for takeoff 36 at when… airborne squawk ident and we are rolling, Scandinavian 686.” When the MD-87 was speeding down the runway, the Cessna crossed the runway holding sign and entered the active runway 18L/36R.

sas-686

At 08:10:21 the nose landing gear of the MD-87 had left the ground and main gears were extending the shock absorbers but the main wheels were still on the ground at an airspeed of 146 knots. At the moment the MD-87 crew probably saw a glimpse of the Cessna through the fog and reacted with additional large nose-up elevator. It collided with the CitationJet. The right wing of the MD-87 sustained damage at the leading edge and the right hand main landing gear leg broke off. It damaged the right flap and struck the no.2 engine which then separated from the pylon. The pilot of the MD-87 gradually advanced the throttles and then the aircraft was airborne for a total of 12 seconds, reaching an estimate height of about 35 ft. The left hand engine suffered a noticeable thrust reduction as a result of debris ingestion which became insufficient to sustain flight.

se-dma1

se-dma-5

The airspeed had increased up to 166 knots, but the MD-87 descended abruptly making contact with the runway with the left hand main gear, the truncated right hand main gear leg and the tip of the right hand wing. Prior to touch down the pilot reduced engine thrust and after ground contact the engine reverse levers were activated and deployed on the left hand engine. Maximum available reverse thrust was selected and the brakes applied. The plane skidded past the grass overrun area, across a service road, crashing sideways into a baggage handling building, which partly collapsed. In total 118 people lost their lives. All on both aircraft and 4 on the ground.


INVESTIGATION 

The investigation into the cause of this accident was led by the ANSV (Italy National Agency for Air Safety).

20011008-0-g-2

They concluded that the immediate cause for the accident has been the runway incursion in the active runway by the Cessna. The obvious consideration is that the human factor related action of the Cessna crew – during low visibility conditions – must be weighted against the scenario that allowed the course of events that led to the fatal collision; equally it can be stated that the system in place at Milan Linate airport was not geared to trap misunderstandings, let alone inadequate procedures, blatant human errors and faulty airport layout.


Final Report

Article By: @AirCrashMayday

Sources: AviationSafety, Wikipedia