Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Nürnberger Flugdienst Flight 108

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Passengers
  
19

Survivors
  
0

Destination
  
Düsseldorf Airport

Fatalities
  
21 (all)

Passenger count
  
19

Crew
  
2

Date
  
8 February 1988

Operator
  
Nürnberger Flugdienst

Survivor
  
0

Nürnberger Flugdienst Flight 108 httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Summary
  
Aircraft struck by lightning, followed by spatial disorientation and in-flight break up

Site
  
2.1 km (1.3 mi) north of Kettwig

Aircraft type
  
Swearingen SA.227BC Metroliner III

Similar
  
Austral Líneas Aéreas Fl, AVAir Flight 3378, Uganda Airlines Flight 775, LOT Flight 703, China Southwest Airlines Fl

Nürnberger Flugdienst Flight 108 was a scheduled regional flight which crashed near Essen, Germany, on 8 February 1988 with the loss of all 21 occupants. The flight was operated by Swearingen SA.227BC Metroliner III D-CABB for Nürnberger Flugdienst, from Hannover Airport to Düsseldorf Airport.

Contents

Accident

Flight 108 took off from Hannover Airport at 7:15AM and was on approach to runway 24 at Düsseldorf Airport by 7:50AM, in a Thunderstorm. The Captain of the flight was Ralf Borsdorf, 36, and the First Officer was Sibylle Heilmann, 29. At 7:56AM both flight recorders abruptly stopped recording and the aircraft disappeared from secondary radar. Two minutes later, pieces of the Metro III impacted near Kettwig adjacent to the Ruhr River, killing all 21 people aboard.

Investigation

The investigation revealed that the aircraft had been hit by lightning during the approach to Düsseldorf Airport, which disrupted the electrical system and therefore the flight instruments. The pilots became disorientated and blindly entered a high speed descent. Witnesses on the ground described the plane as coming out of the clouds briefly and entering a climb, which suggested that the crew briefly regained orientation of the aircraft upon seeing the ground. However, once it re-entered the clouds the crew likely became disoriented again. After almost 2 minutes of "predominantly uncontrolled flight," one of the trailing edge flaps (which could not be retracted without electrical power) failed due to overloading, sending the aircraft into an unrecoverable spiral during which it disintegrated in midair.

References

Nürnberger Flugdienst Flight 108 Wikipedia