Pacific Southwest Airlines Flight 182: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
LA link was for city |
||
(264 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|1978 mid-air collision over San Diego}} |
|||
{{For|other flights with the same number|Flight 182 (disambiguation){{!}}Flight 182}} |
|||
{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2017}} |
{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2017}} |
||
{{Infobox aircraft occurrence |
{{Infobox aircraft occurrence |
||
|occurrence_type = Accident |
| occurrence_type = Accident |
||
| name = Pacific Southwest Airlines Flight 182 |
|||
|name = 1978 San Diego Mid-air collision |
|||
|image = WendtPSA.jpg |
| image = WendtPSA.jpg |
||
| image_upright = 1.15 |
|||
|caption = PSA flight 182 seconds before crashing into [[north park]]. |
|||
| alt = |
|||
|date = {{start date|1978|09|25}} |
|||
| caption = PSA Flight 182 seconds after the collision with the Cessna 172 |
|||
|type = [[Mid-air collision]] resulting from [[pilot error]] and [[Air traffic control|ATC]] error |
|||
| date = {{start date|September 25, 1978|df=y}} |
|||
|site = [[San Diego]], [[California]], United States |
|||
| type = [[Mid-air collision]] |
|||
|total_fatalities = 144 |
|||
| site = [[North Park, San Diego|North Park]], near [[San Diego International Airport]], [[San Diego]], [[California]], United States |
|||
|total_injuries = 9 |
|||
| coordinates = {{coord|32|44|38.2|N|117|07|13.4|W|region:US-CA_type:event|display=inline,title}} |
|||
|plane1_image = Boeing 727-214, Pacific Southwest Airlines (PSA) JP5964380.jpg |
|||
| total_fatalities = 144 |
|||
|plane1_caption = A PSA Boeing 727 similar to the one involved in the accident |
|||
| total_injuries = 9 (on ground) |
|||
|plane1_type = [[Boeing 727|Boeing 727-214]] |
|||
| total_survivors = 0 (in either aircraft) |
|||
|plane1_operator = [[Pacific Southwest Airlines]] |
|||
| plane1_image = N533PS Los Angeles Long Beach Jun78 Boeing 727-2 Pacific Southwest Airlines.jpg |
|||
|plane1_tailnum = N533PS |
|||
| plane1_image_upright = 1.15 |
|||
|plane1_origin = [[Sacramento International Airport]] |
|||
| plane1_caption = N533PS, the Boeing 727 involved in the accident three months prior to the collision |
|||
|plane1_stopover = [[Los Angeles International Airport]] |
|||
| plane1_type = [[Boeing 727|Boeing 727-214]] |
|||
|plane1_destination = [[San Diego International Airport]] |
|||
| aircraft_name = |
|||
|plane1_occupants = 135 |
|||
| plane1_operator = [[Pacific Southwest Airlines]] |
|||
|plane1_passengers = 128 |
|||
| plane1_IATA = PS182 |
|||
|plane1_crew = 7 |
|||
| plane1_ICAO = PSA182 |
|||
|plane1_fatalities = 135 |
|||
| plane1_callsign = PSA 182 |
|||
|plane1_survivors = 0 |
|||
| plane1_tailnum = N533PS |
|||
|plane2_image = OH-CHY12.JPG |
|||
| plane1_origin = [[Sacramento International Airport]] |
|||
|plane2_caption = a Cessna 172 similar to the one involved in the accident |
|||
| plane1_stopover = [[Los Angeles International Airport]] |
|||
|plane2_type = [[Cessna 172]] |
|||
| stopover0 = |
|||
|plane2_operator = {{nowrap|Gibbs Flite Center, Inc.}}<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report">{{cite book |url=https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/AccidentReports/Reports/AAR7905.pdf |title=Aircraft Accident Report, Pacific Southwest Airlines, Inc. Boeing 727-214, N553PS, Flight 182, Gibbs Flite Center, Inc. Cessna 172, N7711G, San Diego, California, September 25, 1978 |publisher=[[National Transportation Safety Board]] |id=NTSB-AAR-79-5 |date=April 20, 1979 |accessdate=December 28, 2017 |format=PDF}}</ref> |
|||
| last_stopover = |
|||
|plane2_tailnum = N7711G |
|||
| plane1_destination = [[San Diego International Airport]] |
|||
|plane2_origin = [[Montgomery Field]], [[San Diego, California]]<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report"/> |
|||
| plane1_occupants = 135 |
|||
| plane1_passengers = 128 |
|||
| plane1_crew = 7 |
|||
| plane1_fatalities = 135 |
|||
| injuries = |
|||
| missing = |
|||
| plane1_survivors = 0 |
|||
| plane2_image = N7711G Cessna 172.jpg |
|||
| plane2_caption = N7711G, the Cessna 172 involved in the accident in a previous livery |
|||
| plane2_image_upright = 1.15 |
|||
| plane2_type = [[Cessna 172]] |
|||
| plane2_operator = {{nowrap|Gibbs Flite Center, Inc.}}<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report"/> |
|||
| plane2_callsign = CESSNA 7711 GOLF |
|||
| plane2_tailnum = N7711G |
|||
| plane2_origin = [[Montgomery Field]], [[San Diego, California]]<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report"/> |
|||
| plane2_occupants = 2 |
|||
| plane2_crew = 2 |
|||
| plane2_fatalities = 2 |
|||
| plane2_survivors = 0 |
|||
| ground_fatalities = 7 |
|||
| ground_injuries = 9 |
|||
}} |
|||
'''Pacific Southwest Airlines Flight 182''' was a scheduled flight on September 25, 1978, by [[Pacific Southwest Airlines]] (PSA), from [[Sacramento International Airport|Sacramento]] to [[San Diego]] ([[San Diego International Airport|SAN]]), with a stopover at [[Los Angeles]] ([[Los Angeles International Airport|LAX]]). The aircraft serving the flight, a [[Boeing 727|Boeing 727-214]]{{efn|The aircraft was a Boeing 727-200 model; Boeing [[List of Boeing customer codes|assigns a unique code]] for each company that buys one of its aircraft, which is applied as a suffix to the model number at the time the aircraft is built, hence "727-214" designates a 727-200 built for Pacific Southwest Airlines (customer code 14).}} ([[Aircraft registration|registration]]: #N533PS), [[Mid-air collision|collided mid-air]] with a private [[Cessna 172]] ([[light aircraft]]; #N7711G) over San Diego. It was Pacific Southwest Airlines' first fatal accident, and it remains the deadliest air disaster in California history. At the time, it was the deadliest air crash to occur in the United States, and remained so until the crash of [[American Airlines Flight 191]] in May 1979. |
|||
|plane2_occupants = 2 |
|||
|plane2_crew = 2 |
|||
|plane2_fatalities = 2 |
|||
|plane2_survivors = 0 |
|||
Following their collision, both the Boeing and the Cessna crashed into [[North Park, San Diego|North Park]], a residential but urban Uptown neighborhood located roughly three miles northeast of [[downtown San Diego]]. PSA 182 crashed just north of the intersection of Dwight and Nile Streets, killing all 135 people aboard the aircraft as well as seven bystanders on the ground or residents in their homes, including two children. The Cessna struck Polk Avenue, between 32nd and Iowa Streets, killing the two pilots on board. Nine others on the ground were injured, and a total of 22 residences were destroyed or damaged by the impact and debris. |
|||
|ground_fatalities = 7 |
|||
|ground_injuries = 9 |
|||
}} |
|||
==Prelude== |
|||
'''Pacific Southwest Airlines (PSA) Flight 182''' was a [[Boeing 727|Boeing 727-214]] commercial airliner, [[Aircraft registration|registration]], N533PS that collided with a private [[Cessna 172]] light aircraft, registration, N7711G over [[San Diego]], California, at 9:01 am on Monday, September 25, 1978. It was [[Pacific Southwest Airlines]]' first fatal accident. |
|||
The crash of Flight 182 was preceded by a near-tragedy almost ten years earlier (also involving Pacific Southwest Airlines), when, on January 15, 1969, a PSA Boeing 727-214 (#N973PS) had collided with Cessna 182L (#N42242) on-ascent from [[San Francisco International Airport]], bound for [[Ontario International Airport]]. The 727 continued-on to Ontario and landed safely, while the Cessna suffered damage on the right wing and returned to San Francisco.<ref>The [[National Transportation Safety Board]] concluded that the incident occurred as a result of "[p]ilots in command of each aircraft fail[ing] to see and avoid the other aircraft." https://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19690115-1 {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200525221144/https://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19690115-1 |date=May 25, 2020 }}</ref> |
|||
Both aircraft crashed into [[North Park, San Diego|North Park]], a San Diego neighborhood. Flight 182 impacted just north of the intersection of Dwight and Nile, killing all 135 people aboard the aircraft and seven people on the ground in houses, including two children. The Cessna impacted on Polk Ave. between 32nd St. and Iowa St. killing the two on board. Nine others on the ground were injured and 22 homes were destroyed or damaged by the impact and debris. |
|||
==Accident== |
==Accident== |
||
{{ |
{{more citations needed|section|date=September 2018}}<!--very few citations; assuming most of this info comes from the NTSB report, but still needs footnotes--> |
||
On the morning of Monday, September 25, 1978, [[Pacific Southwest Airlines]] Flight 182 departed [[Sacramento]] for San Diego via Los Angeles. The seven-person, San Diego-based crew consisted of Captain James McFeron, 42, First Officer Robert Fox, 38; Flight Engineer Martin Wahne, 44 and four flight attendants. |
|||
On the morning of September 25, 1978, Pacific Southwest Airlines Flight 182 departed [[Sacramento]] for San Diego via Los Angeles. The seven-person, San Diego–based crew consisted of Captain James E. "Jim" McFeron (42); First Officer Robert E. "Bob" Fox (38); Flight Engineer Martin J. Wahne (44); and four flight attendants. Captain McFeron, a veteran pilot with PSA, had accumulated a total of 14,382 flight hours, including 10,482 hours on the 727. First Officer Fox had a total of 10,049 flight hours, including 5,800 hours on the 727. Flight Engineer Wahne had a total of 10,800 flying hours, with 6,587 hours in the 727. The flight from Sacramento to Los Angeles was uneventful; at 8:34 am [[Pacific Time Zone|PDT]], Flight 182 departed Los Angeles, with First Officer Fox as the pilot flying. There were 128 passengers on board, including 29 PSA employees; the weather in San Diego that Monday morning was sunny and clear with {{convert|10|mi|spell=in}} of visibility.<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report" />{{rp|2}} |
|||
At 8:59 am, the PSA crew was alerted by the approach controller about a small Cessna 172 aircraft nearby. The Cessna was being flown by two licensed pilots. One was Martin Kazy Jr., 32, who possessed single-engine, multi-engine, and [[Instrument Rating in the United States|instrument flight]] ratings, as well as a [[Pilot certification in the United States|commercial certificate]] and an instrument [[flight instructor]] certificate. He had flown a total of 5,137 hours. The other, David Boswell, 35, a [[United States Marine Corps|U.S. Marine Corps]] sergeant, possessed single-engine and multi-engine ratings and a commercial certificate. He had flown 407 hours at the time of the accident, and was practicing [[instrument landing system]] approaches under the instruction of Kazy in pursuit of his instrument rating. They had departed from [[Montgomery Field]] and were navigating under [[visual flight rules]], which did not require the filing of a flight plan. Boswell was wearing a "hood" to limit his field of vision straight ahead to the cockpit panel, much like an oversized sun visor with vertical panels to block peripheral vision, which is normal in IFR training. At the time of the collision, the Cessna was on the missed approach (in visual meteorological conditions) from San Diego airport's (also known as Lindbergh Field) Runway 9, heading east and climbing. The Cessna was in communication with San Diego approach control.<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report" />{{rp|2}} |
|||
{|class="wikitable" |
{|class="wikitable" |
||
Line 53: | Line 73: | ||
| colspan="3"|'''Abridged communication between PSA 182 and the controllers, and among the PSA flight crew''' |
| colspan="3"|'''Abridged communication between PSA 182 and the controllers, and among the PSA flight crew''' |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="3"|# = Nonpertinent word; * = Unintelligible word; () = Questionable text; (()) = Commentary; Shading = Radio communication |
| colspan="3"|# = Nonpertinent word; * = Unintelligible word; () = Questionable text; (()) = Commentary; Shading = Radio communication |
||
|- |
|- |
||
! Time |
! Time |
||
Line 60: | Line 80: | ||
|- |
|- |
||
| 08:59:30 |
| 08:59:30 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |San Diego<br />approach control |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |PSA one eighty-two, traffic twelve o'clock, one mile northbound. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 08:59:35 |
| 08:59:35 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Captain (to San Diego<br />approach control) |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |We're looking. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 08:59:39 |
| 08:59:39 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |San Diego<br />approach control |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |PSA one eighty-two, additional traffic's ah, twelve o'clock, three miles ((five km))<br />just north of the field, northeast-bound, a Cessna<br />one seventy-two climbing VFR out of one thousand four hundred |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 08:59:39 |
| 08:59:39 |
||
Line 87: | Line 107: | ||
|- |
|- |
||
| 08:59:50 |
| 08:59:50 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |First officer (to San Diego<br />approach control) |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Okay we've got that other twelve. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 08:59:57 |
| 08:59:57 |
||
Line 95: | Line 115: | ||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:15 |
| 09:00:15 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |San Diego approach control |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |PSA one eighty-two, traffic's at twelve o'clock, three miles out of one thousand seven hundred. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:21 |
| 09:00:21 |
||
Line 103: | Line 123: | ||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:22 |
| 09:00:22 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Captain (to San Diego<br />approach control) |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Traffic in sight. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:23 |
| 09:00:23 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |San Diego approach control |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Okay, sir, maintain visual separation, contact Lindbergh tower one three three point three, have a nice day now. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:26 |
| 09:00:26 |
||
Line 115: | Line 135: | ||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:28 |
| 09:00:28 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Captain (to San Diego<br />approach control) |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Okay |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:34 |
| 09:00:34 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Captain (to Lindbergh tower) |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Lindbergh, PSA one eighty-two downwind. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:38 |
| 09:00:38 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Lindbergh tower |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |PSA one eighty-two, Lindbergh tower, ah, traffic twelve o'clock one mile a Cessna. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:41 |
| 09:00:41 |
||
Line 139: | Line 159: | ||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:44 |
| 09:00:44 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Captain (to Lindbergh tower) |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Okay, we had it there a minute ago. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:47 |
| 09:00:47 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Lindbergh tower |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |One eighty-two, roger. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:50 |
| 09:00:50 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Captain (to Lindbergh tower) |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |I think he's pass(ed) off to our right.<br>((Due to radio static, Lindbergh tower voice recording reveals tower received "he's pass''ing'' off to our right".))<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report" />{{rp|3}}<ref name=Mayday/> |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:51 |
| 09:00:51 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Lindbergh tower |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Yeah. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:00:52 |
| 09:00:52 |
||
Line 164: | Line 184: | ||
|} |
|} |
||
The PSA pilots reported that they saw the Cessna after being notified of its position by ATC, although [[cockpit voice recording]]s revealed that |
The PSA pilots reported that they saw the Cessna after being notified of its position by ATC, although [[cockpit voice recording]]s revealed that shortly thereafter, the PSA pilots no longer had the Cessna in sight and they were speculating about its position. Due to radio static, Lindbergh tower (as per the tower voice recording) received the 09.00:50 transmission as "He's pass''ing'' off to our right" and assumed the PSA jet had the Cessna in sight, thus maintaining visual separation.<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report" />{{rp|3}}<ref name=Mayday>{{Cite episode |title=[[List of Mayday episodes#ep80|Blind Spot"]] |series=[[Mayday (Canadian TV series)|Mayday]] |publisher=[[Cineflix]] |network=[[Discovery (Canada)|Discovery Channel Canada]]<!-- country of origin: other networks and series titles found at the linked articles --> |season=11 |number=8 |date=2012-01-27}}</ref> |
||
After getting permission to land, and about 40 seconds before colliding with the Cessna, the conversation among the four occupants of the cockpit ( |
After getting permission to land, and about 40 seconds before colliding with the Cessna, the conversation among the four occupants of the cockpit (captain, first officer, flight engineer, and the off-duty PSA captain, Spencer Nelson, who was riding in the cockpit's jump seat) was, as follows, showing the confusion: |
||
{|class="wikitable" |
{|class="wikitable" |
||
Line 177: | Line 197: | ||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:01:07 |
| 09:01:07 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Lindbergh tower |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |PSA one eighty-two, cleared to land. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:01:08 |
| 09:01:08 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Captain (to Lindbergh tower) |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |One eighty-two's cleared to land. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:01:11 |
| 09:01:11 |
||
Line 213: | Line 233: | ||
|} |
|} |
||
Despite the captain's comment that the Cessna was "probably behind us now," it was actually directly in front of and below the Boeing. The PSA plane was descending and rapidly closing in on the small plane, which had taken a right turn to the east, deviating from the assigned course. According to the report issued by the [[National Transportation Safety Board]] (NTSB), the Cessna may have been a difficult visual target for the jet's pilots, as it was below them and blended in with the multicolored houses of the residential area beneath; the Cessna's [[fuselage]] was yellow, and most of the houses were a yellowish color. Also, the apparent motion of the Cessna as viewed from the Boeing was minimized, as |
Despite the captain's comment that the Cessna was "probably behind us now," it was actually directly in front of and below the Boeing. The PSA plane was descending and rapidly closing in on the small plane, which had taken a right turn to the east, deviating from the assigned course. According to the report issued by the [[National Transportation Safety Board]] (NTSB), the Cessna may have been a difficult visual target for the jet's pilots, as it was below them and blended in with the multicolored houses of the residential area beneath; the Cessna's [[fuselage]] was yellow, and most of the houses were a yellowish color. Also, the apparent motion of the Cessna as viewed from the Boeing was minimized, as the planes were on approximately the same course. The report said that another possible reason that the PSA aircrew had difficulty observing the Cessna was that its fuselage was made visually smaller due to [[Foreshortening#Foreshortening|foreshortening]]. However, the same report in another section also stated, "the white surface of the Cessna's wing could have presented a relatively bright target in the morning sunlight."<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report" /> |
||
A visibility study cited in the NTSB report concluded that the Cessna should have been almost centered in the windshield of the Boeing from 170 to 90 seconds before the collision, and thereafter it was probably positioned on the lower portion of the windshield just above the windshield wipers. The study also said that the Cessna pilot would have had about a 10-second view of the Boeing from the left-door window about 90 seconds before the collision, but visibility of the overtaking jet was blocked by the Cessna's ceiling structure for the remainder of the time. |
A visibility study cited in the NTSB report concluded that the Cessna should have been almost centered in the windshield of the Boeing from 170 to 90 seconds before the collision, and thereafter it was probably positioned on the lower portion of the windshield just above the windshield wipers. The study also said that the Cessna pilot would have had about a 10-second view of the Boeing from the left-door window about 90 seconds before the collision, but visibility of the overtaking jet was blocked by the Cessna's ceiling structure for the remainder of the time.<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report" /> |
||
Flight 182's crew never explicitly alerted the tower that they had lost sight of the Cessna |
Flight 182's crew never explicitly alerted the tower that they had lost sight of the Cessna; if they had made this clear to controllers, the crash might not have happened. Also, if the Cessna had maintained the heading of 70° assigned to it by ATC instead of turning to 90°, the NTSB estimates the planes would have missed each other by about {{cvt|1000|ft|m}} instead of colliding. Ultimately, the NTSB maintained that, regardless of that change in course, it was the responsibility of the crew in the overtaking jet to comply with the regulatory requirement to pass "well clear" of the Cessna.<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report" /> |
||
Approach control on the ground picked up an automated conflict alert 19 seconds before the collision, but did not relay this information to the aircraft because, according to the approach coordinator, such alerts were commonplace even when no actual conflict existed. The NTSB stated: "Based on all information available to him, he decided that the crew of Flight 182 were complying with their visual separation clearance; that they were accomplishing an overtake maneuver within the separation parameters of the conflict alert computer; and that, therefore, no conflict existed."<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report" /> |
|||
This was the conversation in the PSA cockpit starting 16 seconds |
This was the conversation in the PSA cockpit starting 16 seconds before collision with the Cessna: |
||
{|class="wikitable" |
{|class="wikitable" |
||
Line 270: | Line 290: | ||
[[File:PSA 06-01568.jpg|thumb|Wreckage of PSA 182 after the crash]] |
[[File:PSA 06-01568.jpg|thumb|Wreckage of PSA 182 after the crash]] |
||
PSA Flight 182 overtook the Cessna, which was directly below it, both roughly on a 090 (due east) heading. The collision occurred at about {{convert|2600|ft|m}}.<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report"/> According to several witnesses on the ground, first, they heard a loud metallic "crunching" sound, then an explosion, and a fire drew them to look up. |
PSA Flight 182 overtook the Cessna, which was directly below it, both roughly on a 090 (due east) heading. The collision occurred at about {{convert|2600|ft|m}}.<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report">{{cite book |url=https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/AccidentReports/Reports/AAR7905.pdf |title=Aircraft Accident Report, Pacific Southwest Airlines, Inc., B-727, N533PS and Gibbs Flite Center, Inc., Cessna 172, N7711G, San Diego, California, September 25, 1978 |publisher=[[National Transportation Safety Board]] |id=NTSB-AAR-79-5 |date=April 20, 1979 |access-date=May 2, 2021 |archive-date=March 19, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210319160818/https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/AccidentReports/Reports/AAR7905.pdf |url-status=live }} – [https://libraryonline.erau.edu/online-full-text/ntsb/aircraft-accident-reports/AAR79-05.pdf Copy at] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230721233626/https://libraryonline.erau.edu/online-full-text/ntsb/aircraft-accident-reports/AAR79-05.pdf |date=July 21, 2023 }} [[Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University]].</ref> According to several witnesses on the ground, first, they heard a loud metallic "crunching" sound, then an explosion, and a fire drew them to look up. |
||
Staff photographer Hans Wendt of the San Diego County Public Relations Office was attending an outdoor press event with a still camera and |
Staff photographer Hans Wendt<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/sandiegouniontribune/obituary.aspx?n=hans-e-wendt&pid=166476016|title = Hans E. Wendt Obituary (1934–2013) San Diego Union-Tribune|website = [[Legacy.com]]}}</ref> of the San Diego County Public Relations Office was attending an outdoor press event with a still camera and took two post-collision photographs of the falling 727, its right wing burning.<ref name=ThisIsIt /> Cameraman Steve Howell from local [[KNSD|TV channel 39]] was attending the same event and captured the Cessna on film as it fell toward Earth, the sound of the impacting 727, and the mushroom cloud from the resulting crash. For its coverage of the disaster, ''The San Diego Evening Tribune'', a predecessor to ''[[The San Diego Union-Tribune]]'', was awarded a [[Pulitzer Prize]] in 1979 for "Local, General, or Spot News Reporting".<ref>[https://www.pulitzer.org/prize-winners-by-year/1979 Pulitzer Prize Award Winners 1979] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160105064202/http://www.pulitzer.org/awards/1979 |date=January 5, 2016 }} by [https://www.pulitzer.org/ The Pulitzer Prizes] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230107172107/https://www.pulitzer.org/article/mass-shooting-tight-deadline |date=January 7, 2023 }}</ref> |
||
The wreckage of the Cessna plummeted to the ground, its vertical stabilizer torn from its fuselage and bent leftward, its debris hitting around {{convert|3500|ft|m}} northwest of where the 727 went down. PSA 182's right wing was heavily damaged, rendering the plane uncontrollable and sending it careening into a sharp right bank ( |
The wreckage of the Cessna plummeted to the ground, its vertical stabilizer torn from its fuselage and bent leftward, its debris hitting around {{convert|3500|ft|m}} northwest of where the 727 went down. PSA 182's right wing was heavily damaged, rendering the plane uncontrollable and sending it careening into a sharp right bank (seen in the Wendt photos), and the fuel tank inside it ruptured and started a fire, when this final conversation took place inside the cockpit: |
||
{|class="wikitable" |
{|class="wikitable" |
||
Line 316: | Line 336: | ||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:01:55 |
| 09:01:55 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Captain (to Lindbergh tower) |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Tower, we're going down, this is PSA |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:01:57 |
| 09:01:57 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Lindbergh tower |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |OK, we'll call the equipment for you |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:01:58 |
| 09:01:58 |
||
Line 331: | Line 351: | ||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:01:59 |
| 09:01:59 |
||
|Unknown |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;" |Unknown |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;"|Bob! |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:01:59 |
| 09:01:59 |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;"|Captain (to Lindbergh tower) |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E8F6F3;"|Oh, this is it, baby! |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 09:02:00 |
| 09:02:00 |
||
Line 362: | Line 382: | ||
|} |
|} |
||
[[File:DwightandNile2010.JPG|thumb|right|PSA 182 crash site as it appeared in 2010: Looking west down Dwight St., Nile Street intersection is in foreground; Boundary St. intersection in background. The initial impact was about 30 |
[[File:DwightandNile2010.JPG|thumb|right|PSA 182 crash site as it appeared in 2010: Looking west down Dwight St., Nile Street intersection is in foreground; Boundary St. intersection in background. The initial impact was about {{cvt|30|ft|m}} to the right of the photographer, on Nile St.]] |
||
Flight 182 struck a house {{convert|3|mi|km}} northeast of Lindbergh Field, in a residential section of San Diego known as [[North Park, San Diego, California|North Park]]. It impacted at a {{convert| |
Flight 182 struck a house at 3611 Nile Street, {{convert|3|mi|km|sigfig=1}} northeast of Lindbergh Field, in a residential section of San Diego known as [[North Park, San Diego, California|North Park]]. It then impacted the driveway of the house at a {{convert|260|knots|mph km/h}}, nose-down attitude while banked 50° to the right. [[Seismograph]]ic readings indicated that the impact occurred at 09:02:07, about 2.5 seconds after the [[cockpit voice recorder]] lost power. The plane crashed just west of the I-805 freeway, around {{convert|30|ft|m}} north of the intersection of Dwight and Nile Streets, with the bulk of the debris field spreading in a northeast to southwesterly direction toward Boundary Street. One of the plane's wings lodged in a house. The largest piece of the Cessna impacted about six blocks away near 32nd Street and Polk Avenue {{coord|32|45|7.97|N|117|7|32.57|W|region:US-CA_type:event}}. |
||
The explosion and fire from the 727 crash created a mushroom cloud that could be seen for miles (and was photographed and filmed). About 60% of the entire San Diego Fire Department was ultimately dispatched to the scene. The severity of the crash meant the engines, tail section, and landing gear were among the few recognizable parts remaining of the destroyed 727.<ref name=ThisIsIt>{{cite web |url=http://www.sandiegomagazine.com/San-Diego-Magazine/August-1998/This-is-It/ |title=This Is It! |last=Shess |first=Thomas |publisher=San Diego Magazine |date=June 29, 2007 |access-date=December 31, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170429192101/http://www.sandiegomagazine.com/San-Diego-Magazine/August-1998/This-is-It/ |archive-date=April 29, 2017 |url-status=dead }}</ref> However, the impact and debris area was relatively small due to the plane's steep, nose-down angle.<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report" />{{Rp|8}} |
|||
In total, 144 people<ref name=Lessons>{{cite web |url=http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/19980921-481-lessonsf.html |title=Lessons from disaster |last=Steinberg |first=James |date= September 21, 1998 |website=SignOnSanDiego.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080925232351/http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/19980921-481-lessonsf.html |archive-date=September 25, 2008 |access-date=August 27, 2018 |dead-url=yes}}</ref> lost their lives in the disaster, including Flight 182's seven crew members, 30 additional PSA employees<ref name=Memorial>[http://www.jetpsa.com/memorial/memorial.html PSA Flight 182 & 1771 Memorial Page] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090719104634/http://www.jetpsa.com/memorial/memorial.html |date=July 19, 2009 }} by [http://www.jetpsa.com/ JetPSA]</ref> [[Deadheading (employee)|deadheading]] to PSA's San Diego base, the two Cessna occupants, and seven residents (five women, two male children) on the ground. |
|||
In total, 144 people<ref name=Lessons>{{cite web |url=http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/19980921-481-lessonsf.html |title=Lessons from disaster |last=Steinberg |first=James |date= September 21, 1998 |website=SignOnSanDiego.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080925232351/http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/19980921-481-lessonsf.html |archive-date=September 25, 2008 |access-date=August 27, 2018 |url-status=dead}}</ref> died in the crash, including Flight 182's seven crew members, 30 additional PSA employees<ref name=Memorial>[http://www.jetpsa.com/memorial/memorial.html PSA Flight 182 & 1771 Memorial Page] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090719104634/http://www.jetpsa.com/memorial/memorial.html |date=July 19, 2009 }} by [http://www.jetpsa.com/ JetPSA] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200117022005/http://www.jetpsa.com/ |date=January 17, 2020 }}</ref> [[Deadheading (employee)|deadheading]] to PSA's San Diego base, the two Cessna occupants, and seven residents (five women, two boys) on the ground. With 144 deaths, it was the deadliest accident to occur in the United States, surpassing the [[1960 New York mid-air collision]]'s 134 fatalities, until eight months later when [[American Airlines Flight 191]] crashed with 273 deaths. As of 2021, it is the sixth-deadliest aviation disaster in the United States (not including terrorism), as well as the deadliest aviation disaster in California. |
|||
==Investigation== |
|||
[[File:Psa182.gif|thumb|420px|Sequence of events leading to the collision, X - PSA 182 ♦ - Cessna 172]] |
|||
==Investigation== |
|||
At the nearby [[St. Augustine High School (San Diego, California)|St. Augustine High School]], a triage and command and control center was established, with its gymnasium being used as a makeshift morgue and for forensic investigation. |
|||
<ref>[http://legacy.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20070525/news_lz1e25luibel.html The St. Augustine High School Gym Morgue] by Sarah Luibel at [http://www.signonsandiego.com/ SignOnSanDiego.com]</ref> {{citation needed|date=April 2012}} |
At the nearby [[St. Augustine High School (San Diego, California)|St. Augustine High School]], a triage and command and control center was established, with its gymnasium being used as a makeshift morgue and for forensic investigation.<ref>[http://legacy.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20070525/news_lz1e25luibel.html The St. Augustine High School Gym Morgue] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120830144251/http://legacy.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20070525/news_lz1e25luibel.html |date=August 30, 2012 }} by Sarah Luibel at [http://www.signonsandiego.com/ SignOnSanDiego.com] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070616051432/http://www.signonsandiego.com/ |date=June 16, 2007 }}</ref> {{citation needed|date=April 2012}} Freezer units were used to preserve the biological remains, as San Diego was in the middle of a severe heat wave, with temperatures exceeding {{convert|100|F|C}}. |
||
National Transportation Safety Board report number NTSB/AAR-79-05,<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report"/> released April 19, 1979, determined that the probable cause of the accident was the failure of the PSA flight crew to follow proper [[air traffic control]] (ATC) procedures. Flight 182's crew lost sight of the Cessna in contravention of ATC instructions to "keep visual separation from that traffic", and did not alert ATC that they had lost sight of it. Errors on the part of ATC were also named as contributing factors, including the use of visual separation procedures when radar clearances were available. Additionally, the Cessna pilots, for reasons unknown, did not maintain their assigned east-northeasterly [[Air navigation|heading]] of 070° after completing a practice instrument approach, nor did they notify ATC of their course change. Concerning this, the NTSB report states, "According to the testimony of the controllers and the assistant chief flight instructor of the Gibbs Flite Center (owner of the Cessna), the 08:59:56 transmission from approach control to the Cessna only imposed an altitude limitation on the pilot, he was not required to maintain the 070° heading. However, the assistant chief flight instructor testified that he would expect the [Cessna] pilot to fly the assigned heading or inform the controller that he was not able to do so." |
National Transportation Safety Board report number NTSB/AAR-79-05,<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report"/> released April 19, 1979, determined that the probable cause of the accident was the failure of the PSA flight crew to follow proper [[air traffic control]] (ATC) procedures. Flight 182's crew lost sight of the Cessna in contravention of ATC instructions to "keep visual separation from that traffic", and did not alert ATC that they had lost sight of it. Errors on the part of ATC were also named as contributing factors, including the use of visual separation procedures when radar clearances were available. Additionally, the Cessna pilots, for reasons unknown, did not maintain their assigned east-northeasterly [[Air navigation|heading]] of 070° after completing a practice instrument approach, nor did they notify ATC of their course change. Concerning this, the NTSB report states, "According to the testimony of the controllers and the assistant chief flight instructor of the Gibbs Flite Center (owner of the Cessna), the 08:59:56 transmission from approach control to the Cessna only imposed an altitude limitation on the pilot, he was not required to maintain the 070° heading. However, the assistant chief flight instructor testified that he would expect the [Cessna] pilot to fly the assigned heading or inform the controller that he was not able to do so." |
||
A dissenting opinion in the NTSB crash report by member [[Francis H. McAdams]] strongly questioned why the unauthorized change in course by the Cessna was not specifically cited as a "contributing factor" in the final report; instead, it was listed as simply a "finding |
A dissenting opinion in the original NTSB crash report by member [[Francis H. McAdams]] strongly questioned why the unauthorized change in course by the Cessna was not specifically cited as a "contributing factor" in the final report; instead, it was listed as simply a "finding", which carries less weight. McAdams also "sharply disagreed" with the majority of the panel on other issues, giving more weight to inadequate ATC procedures as another "probable cause" to the accident, rather than merely treating them as a contributing factor. McAdams also added the "possible misidentification of the Cessna by the PSA aircrew due to the presence of a third unknown aircraft in the area" as a contributing factor. The majority panel members did not cite this as a credible possibility. In an August 1982 amendment to the probable-cause finding, the NTSB adopted McAdams' viewpoints regarding both ATC and pilot failings.<ref name=FAA>{{cite web |url=http://www.faa.gov/about/media/b-chron.pdf |title=FAA Historical Chronology, 1926–1996 |page=203 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080624211236/http://www.faa.gov/about/media/b-chron.pdf |archive-date=June 24, 2008 |publisher=[[Federal Aviation Administration]]}}</ref> |
||
The report states that in the PSA cockpit, some conversation in the cockpit was not relevant to the flight during critical phases of the flight. The report states that the conversation was not a causal factor in the accident, but that "it does point out the dangers inherent in this type of cockpit environment during descent and approach to landing."<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report"/>{{rp|33}} |
The report states that in the PSA cockpit, some conversation in the cockpit was not relevant to the flight during critical phases of the flight. The report states that the conversation was not a causal factor in the accident, but that "it does point out the dangers inherent in this type of cockpit environment during descent and approach to landing."<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report"/>{{rp|33}} |
||
The two photographs of Flight 182 taken by Hans Wendt revealed that the left wing flaps were extended as the crew tried |
The two photographs of Flight 182 taken by Hans Wendt revealed that the left wing flaps were extended as the crew tried to steer the crippled aircraft and that the right wing had a large piece missing where the Cessna had struck. Although it was obvious that the flaps were damaged or destroyed by the collision, NTSB investigators could not determine the condition of the hydraulic system in the wing and whether the plumbing inside it had actually been ruptured or merely flattened. Since the right wing was extremely fragmented, examination of debris provided no useful information. The crew may have tried to guide the 727 away from impacting a residential area and onto Route 805 where damage would be lessened,{{failed verification|date=February 2017}} but could not do so. The final conclusion of the NTSB was that even if the hydraulic lines in the right wing were undamaged, the missing flaps and spreading fire would have adversely affected the plane's aerodynamic profile, and in all likelihood Flight 182 was completely uncontrollable after the collision.<ref name="NTSB AAR-79-05 Final Report"/>{{rp|31–32}} |
||
==Aftermath== |
==Aftermath== |
||
In the aftermath of the devastation on the ground, a controversy was renewed in San Diego over the placement of such a busy airport in a heavily populated area. Despite proposals to relocate it, [[San Diego International Airport]], the busiest single-runway commercial airport in the U.S., remains in use.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20080327052308/http://www.san.org/airport/airport_facts/index.asp Facts about San Diego International Airport] by [http://www.san.org/sdcraa/ San Diego County Regional Airport Authority] hosted by [[Internet Archive]]</ref> The crash site was cordoned off by police and remained so for an entire year. |
In the aftermath of the devastation on the ground, a controversy was renewed in San Diego over the placement of such a busy airport in a heavily populated area. Despite proposals to relocate it, [[San Diego International Airport]], the busiest single-runway commercial airport in the U.S., remains in use at the same site.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20080327052308/http://www.san.org/airport/airport_facts/index.asp Facts about San Diego International Airport] by [http://www.san.org/sdcraa/ San Diego County Regional Airport Authority] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100908223653/http://www.san.org/sdcraa/ |date=September 8, 2010 }} hosted by [[Internet Archive]]</ref> The crash site was cordoned off by police and remained so for an entire year. |
||
At the time, PSA Flight 182 was the U.S.'s deadliest commercial air disaster, surpassed eight months later on Friday, May 25, 1979, when [[American Airlines Flight 191]] (a [[McDonnell Douglas DC-10]]) crashed in Chicago. |
At the time, PSA Flight 182 was the U.S.'s deadliest commercial air disaster, surpassed eight months later on Friday, May 25, 1979, when [[American Airlines Flight 191]] (a [[McDonnell Douglas DC-10]]) crashed in Chicago.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19790525-2|title=ASN Aircraft accident McDonnell Douglas DC-10-10 N110AA Chicago-O'Hare International Airport, IL (ORD)|last=Ranter|first=Harro|website=aviation-safety.net|access-date=2019-09-12|archive-date=October 8, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181008174950/https://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19790525-2|url-status=live}}</ref> |
||
As a result of the crash, the NTSB recommended the immediate implementation of a [[Terminal Radar Service Area]] around Lindbergh Field to provide for the separation of aircraft, as well as an immediate review of control procedures for all busy terminal areas. This initial rule did not include small, general-aviation aircraft. Therefore, on May 15, 1980, the [[Federal Aviation Administration]] (FAA), implemented what is called [[Airspace class (United States)|Class B airspace]] to provide for the separation of all aircraft operating in the area. Additionally, all aircraft, regardless of size, are required to operate under "positive radar control", a rule that allows only radar control from the ground for all aircraft operating in the airport's airspace.<ref name=Lessons /> |
As a result of the crash, the NTSB recommended the immediate implementation of a [[Terminal Radar Service Area]] around Lindbergh Field to provide for the separation of aircraft, as well as an immediate review of control procedures for all busy terminal areas. This initial rule did not include small, general-aviation aircraft. Therefore, on May 15, 1980, the [[Federal Aviation Administration]]<!-- (FAA) -->, implemented what is called [[Airspace class (United States)|Class B airspace]] to provide for the separation of all aircraft operating in the area. Additionally, all aircraft, regardless of size, are required to operate under "positive radar control", a rule that allows only radar control from the ground for all aircraft operating in the airport's airspace.<ref name=Lessons /> |
||
At the time of the crash, Lindbergh Field was the only airport in San Diego County with an instrument landing system. Since the Cessna pilot was practicing instrument landings, the FAA quickly installed the system at [[Montgomery Field]] and [[McClellan-Palomar Airport]], as well as a localizer approach to [[Gillespie Field]], to allow pilots to practice at smaller airports.<ref name=Lessons /> |
At the time of the crash, Lindbergh Field was the only airport in San Diego County with an instrument landing system. Since the Cessna pilot was practicing instrument landings, the FAA quickly installed the system at [[Montgomery Field]] and [[McClellan-Palomar Airport]], as well as a localizer approach to [[Gillespie Field]], to allow pilots to practice at smaller airports.<ref name=Lessons /> |
||
As a result of this and other midair collisions<ref>{{cite news |title=United Airlines Tests Anti-Collision Device With Initial Success |work=The Wall Street Journal |issn= |
As a result of this and other midair collisions<ref>{{cite news |title=United Airlines Tests Anti-Collision Device With Initial Success |work=The Wall Street Journal |issn=0099-9660 |date=November 19, 1987}}</ref> (including [[Aeroméxico Flight 498|an almost identical one]] in 1986) the "[[Traffic Collision Avoidance System|Traffic Collision Alert and Avoidance System]]" (TCAS) is now installed in all commercial passenger aircraft and in most commercial cargo airplanes. TCAS gives the pilots visual and audible warnings in the cockpit when two aircraft are approaching each other, and directs pilots to either climb or descend to avoid the other aircraft. However, the system only works if at least one aircraft is equipped with TCAS and the other with a transponder. After the 1986 Cerritos collision, all flights in Class B were required to have a Mode C transponder. The [[International Civil Aviation Organization]] does not require TCAS on the type of small, single-engined planes that were involved in the PSA disaster or the one involving AeroMexico. Only aircraft certified to carry 19 or more passengers or have a [[maximum takeoff weight]] of more than {{cvt|12600|lb|kg}} are affected by the TCAS rule. |
||
Because the PSA 182/Cessna collision was the result of pilot error, it is used as a teaching aid in modern flight training. Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University uses the crash in "human factors" classes,<ref name=Lessons /> |
Because the PSA 182/Cessna collision was the result of pilot error, it is used as a teaching aid in modern flight training. Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University uses the crash in "human factors" classes,<ref name=Lessons /> while others refer to it when teaching airspace or visual separation rules.{{citation needed|date=April 2015}} |
||
Don St. Germain, who was an employee with PSA, was working aboard this flight when he died with the other 143 passengers and crew. Nine years later, his brother-in-law Douglas Arthur, who was a PSA pilot, was killed aboard [[PSA Flight 1771]] near [[Cayucos, California]] along with 42 other passengers and crew by a recently fired employee named David Augustus Burke. Burke shot his former boss, a flight attendant, the two pilots, and Arthur before he sent the plane into a nosedive, causing the aircraft to crash at the [[speed of sound]]. As such, Nikki St. Germain lost her brother in the first deadly crash of a PSA flight, and her husband in the second. Those were the only two deadly crashes in the 40-year history of the airline.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://apnews.com/9486da407562f8b43ce2968e05e615ff|title=Pilot's Widow Lost Brother in Previous PSA Crash|website=[[Associated Press]]|access-date=July 27, 2021|archive-date=July 27, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210727190235/https://apnews.com/9486da407562f8b43ce2968e05e615ff|url-status=live}}</ref> |
|||
The midair collision contributed to Lindbergh Field being ranked 10th among the world's Most Extreme Airports in a two-hour documentary of the same name released in July 2010, which aired in the U.S. on the [[History (U.S. TV channel)|History Channel]]. |
|||
==Memorials== |
==Memorials== |
||
[[File:psa182plaque.jpg|thumb|right|Plaque honoring crash victims]] |
[[File:psa182plaque.jpg|thumb|right|Plaque honoring crash victims]] |
||
[[File:PSA182 Memorial.jpg|thumb|PSA 182 Memorial at San Diego Air & Space Museum]] |
|||
A memorial plaque honoring those who died on both planes and on the ground is located in the [[San Diego Aerospace Museum]], near the Theodore Gildred Flight Rotunda in San Diego's [[Balboa Park, San Diego, California|Balboa Park]]. On the 20th anniversary of the crash, a tree was planted next to the North Park branch library, and a memorial plaque was dedicated to those who lost their lives. The library is not in the immediate vicinity of the actual crash site; it has been completely rebuilt and bears no visible evidence of the crash. |
|||
A memorial plaque honoring those who died on both planes and on the ground is located in the [[San Diego Aerospace Museum]], near the Theodore Gildred Flight Rotunda in San Diego's [[Balboa Park, San Diego, California|Balboa Park]]. On the 20th anniversary of the crash, a tree was planted next to the North Park branch library, and a memorial plaque was dedicated to those who lost their lives. The library is not in the immediate vicinity of the actual crash site; it has been rebuilt and bears no visible evidence of the crash.<ref name="signonsandiego" /> |
|||
On September 25, 2008, over 100 relatives and friends of the victims of PSA 182 gathered |
Informal memorial gatherings are held annually on the anniversary of the crash, at the intersection of Dwight and Nile Streets in North Park. On September 25, 2008, over 100 relatives and friends of the victims of PSA 182 gathered on the 30th-anniversary of the crash.<ref name="signonsandiego">[http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/20080925-0942-bn25psa.html PSA crash victims remembered at morning service] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090504084759/http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/20080925-0942-bn25psa.html |date=May 4, 2009 }} by Jeff McDonald at [http://www.signonsandiego.com/ SignOnSanDiego.com] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070616051432/http://www.signonsandiego.com/ |date=June 16, 2007 }}</ref> |
||
==Depictions in media== |
==Depictions in media== |
||
The ATC recording of the accident, as well as graphic footage of the aftermath, was included in the [[mondo film]] ''[[Faces of Death]]'', released two months after the crash. |
|||
The accident was covered in season 11 of the documentary TV series [[Mayday (Canadian TV series)|''Mayday'']] in an episode titled ''Blind Spot''. The episode featured interviews from witnesses and accident investigators and recreations of the crash.<ref name="Blind Spot">{{Cite episode |title=Blind Spot |series=[[Mayday (Canadian TV series)|Mayday]] |network=[[Discovery Channel Canada]] / [[National Geographic Society|National Geographic]] |season=11 |year=2012}}</ref> |
|||
The accident was covered in season 11 of the documentary TV series [[Mayday (Canadian TV series)|''Mayday'']] in an episode titled "Blind Spot". The episode featured interviews from witnesses and accident investigators and recreations of the crash.<ref name=Mayday/> This episode aired on the Smithsonian Channel as ''Air Disasters'' season three, episode one. |
|||
The accident was covered in Smithsonian Channel's ''Air Disasters'' in the ''Blind Spot'' episode, season 3: episode 1. |
|||
The accident was covered in MSNBC's ''Why Planes Crash'' in the |
The accident was covered in MSNBC's ''[[Why Planes Crash]]'' in the episode "Collision Course", first aired April 27, 2013.{{Citation needed|date=October 2024}} |
||
Years later, [[Whoopi Goldberg]], who had witnessed the collision, referenced it as to why she stopped traveling by air.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/2011/SHOWBIZ/04/12/whoopi.goldberg.piers.morgan/index.html|title=Whoopi Goldberg's 'one really major regret'|publisher=CNN|access-date=May 24, 2019|archive-date=May 24, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190524021715/http://www.cnn.com/2011/SHOWBIZ/04/12/whoopi.goldberg.piers.morgan/index.html|url-status=live}}</ref> |
|||
==See also== |
==See also== |
||
* [[Mid-air collision#list-civilian-midair|List of notable midair collisions]] |
|||
*[[Piedmont Airlines Flight 22]], 1967 incident when a Boeing 727 collided with a [[Cessna 310]] |
|||
* [[List of accidents and incidents involving commercial aircraft]] |
|||
*[[Allegheny Airlines Flight 853]], 1969 incident when a Douglas DC-9 collided with a [[Piper PA-28]] |
|||
*[[1986 Cerritos mid-air collision|Aeroméxico Flight 498]], 1986 incident when a [[McDonnell Douglas DC-9|Douglas DC-9]] collided with a [[Piper Cherokee]] |
|||
==Notes== |
|||
*[[List of accidents and incidents involving commercial aircraft]] |
|||
{{notelist}} |
|||
*[[Mid-air collision|List of notable midair collisions]] |
|||
==References== |
==References== |
||
{{ |
{{reflist|30em}} |
||
{{Reflist}} |
|||
==External links== |
==External links== |
||
<!-- DO NOT INCLUDE LINKS THAT ARE ALREADY USED AS REFERENCES IN THE ARTICLE --> |
<!-- DO NOT INCLUDE LINKS THAT ARE ALREADY USED AS REFERENCES IN THE ARTICLE --> |
||
*{{ASN accident|id=19780925-0}} |
* {{ASN accident|id=19780925-0}} |
||
*[http://www.psa-history.org/about_psa/incidents Article about Flight 182] – [[Pacific Southwest Airlines]] |
* [http://www.psa-history.org/about_psa/incidents/ Article about Flight 182] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210506042420/http://psa-history.org/about_psa/incidents/ |date=May 6, 2021 }} – [[Pacific Southwest Airlines]] |
||
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20090719104634/http://www.jetpsa.com/memorial/memorial.html PSA Flight 182 & 1771 Memorial Page] at [http://www.jetpsa.com/ The PSA History Museum] |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090719104634/http://www.jetpsa.com/memorial/memorial.html PSA Flight 182 & 1771 Memorial Page] at [http://www.jetpsa.com/ The PSA History Museum] |
||
*[ |
* [http://www.sandiegomag.com/issues/august98/psa.shtml San Diego magazine 20th anniversary article about the PSA Disaster] – [https://web.archive.org/web/20060117111045/http://www.sandiegomag.com/issues/august98/psa.shtml Archived copy] from [[Wayback Machine]] |
||
*[ |
* [https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,919842,00.html "Death Over San Diego", Time Magazine, October 9, 1978] |
||
*[http://www.10news.com/news/36th-anniversary-of-flight-182-north-park-crash 36th anniversary of Flight 182 North Park crash] – [[KGTV]] |
* [http://www.10news.com/news/36th-anniversary-of-flight-182-north-park-crash 36th anniversary of Flight 182 North Park crash] – [[KGTV]] |
||
*[ |
* [https://www.super70s.com/psa-727-crashes-into-san-diego-after-collision/ PSA Crash Page with map] |
||
*[ |
* [https://www.airliners.net/search?registrationActual=N533PS&display=detail Pre-crash photos of 727 N533PS] |
||
*[http://www.aviationexplorer.com/audio/psa_182.wav Audio of communications between ATC and PSA Flight 182] |
* [http://www.aviationexplorer.com/audio/psa_182.wav Audio of communications between ATC and PSA Flight 182] – [[WAV]] file |
||
*[http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20080926/news_1m26psa.html Air Tragedy Remembered] [[Union Tribune]] Article about 30th anniversary tribute |
* [http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20080926/news_1m26psa.html Air Tragedy Remembered] [[Union Tribune]] Article about 30th anniversary tribute |
||
*[http://returntodwightandnile.com/ "Return to Dwight and Nile: The Crash of PSA 182"] A 2009 documentary with eyewitness interviews |
* [http://returntodwightandnile.com/ "Return to Dwight and Nile: The Crash of PSA 182"] A 2009 documentary with eyewitness interviews |
||
{{Aviation accidents and incidents in 1978}} |
{{Aviation accidents and incidents in 1978}} |
||
{{Aviation accidents and incidents in the United States in the 1970s}} |
|||
{{Portal bar|California|San Diego County|1970s|Aviation}} |
|||
{{Portal bar|California|Aviation|Modern history}} |
|||
{{NTSB}} |
|||
{{DEFAULTSORT:PSA Flight 182}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:PSA Flight 182}} |
||
[[Category:Accidents and incidents involving the Boeing 727]] |
|||
[[Category:Airliner accidents and incidents caused by pilot error]] |
|||
[[Category:Airliner accidents and incidents in California]] |
[[Category:Airliner accidents and incidents in California]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:Mid-air collisions]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:Mid-air collisions involving airliners]] |
||
[[Category:Mid-air collisions involving general aviation aircraft]] |
|||
[[Category:Aviation accidents and incidents caused by air traffic controller error]] |
[[Category:Aviation accidents and incidents caused by air traffic controller error]] |
||
[[Category:Airliner accidents and incidents caused by pilot error]] |
|||
[[Category:History of San Diego]] |
|||
[[Category:Pacific Southwest Airlines accidents and incidents|Flight 182]] |
[[Category:Pacific Southwest Airlines accidents and incidents|Flight 182]] |
||
[[Category:Aviation accidents and incidents in the United States in 1978]] |
|||
[[Category:Accidents and incidents involving the Boeing 727]] |
|||
[[Category:September 1978 events]] |
|||
[[Category:20th century in San Diego]] |
|||
[[Category:San Diego International Airport]] |
[[Category:San Diego International Airport]] |
||
[[Category:1970s in San Diego]] |
|||
[[Category:1978 in California]] |
|||
[[Category:Aviation accidents and incidents in the United States in 1978]] |
|||
[[Category:September 1978 events in the United States]] |
Latest revision as of 21:16, 21 December 2024
Accident | |
---|---|
Date | September 25, 1978 |
Summary | Mid-air collision |
Site | North Park, near San Diego International Airport, San Diego, California, United States 32°44′38.2″N 117°07′13.4″W / 32.743944°N 117.120389°W |
Total fatalities | 144 |
Total injuries | 9 (on ground) |
Total survivors | 0 (in either aircraft) |
First aircraft | |
N533PS, the Boeing 727 involved in the accident three months prior to the collision | |
Type | Boeing 727-214 |
Operator | Pacific Southwest Airlines |
IATA flight No. | PS182 |
ICAO flight No. | PSA182 |
Call sign | PSA 182 |
Registration | N533PS |
Flight origin | Sacramento International Airport |
Stopover | Los Angeles International Airport |
Destination | San Diego International Airport |
Occupants | 135 |
Passengers | 128 |
Crew | 7 |
Fatalities | 135 |
Survivors | 0 |
Second aircraft | |
N7711G, the Cessna 172 involved in the accident in a previous livery | |
Type | Cessna 172 |
Operator | Gibbs Flite Center, Inc.[1] |
Call sign | CESSNA 7711 GOLF |
Registration | N7711G |
Flight origin | Montgomery Field, San Diego, California[1] |
Occupants | 2 |
Crew | 2 |
Fatalities | 2 |
Survivors | 0 |
Ground casualties | |
Ground fatalities | 7 |
Ground injuries | 9 |
Pacific Southwest Airlines Flight 182 was a scheduled flight on September 25, 1978, by Pacific Southwest Airlines (PSA), from Sacramento to San Diego (SAN), with a stopover at Los Angeles (LAX). The aircraft serving the flight, a Boeing 727-214[a] (registration: #N533PS), collided mid-air with a private Cessna 172 (light aircraft; #N7711G) over San Diego. It was Pacific Southwest Airlines' first fatal accident, and it remains the deadliest air disaster in California history. At the time, it was the deadliest air crash to occur in the United States, and remained so until the crash of American Airlines Flight 191 in May 1979.
Following their collision, both the Boeing and the Cessna crashed into North Park, a residential but urban Uptown neighborhood located roughly three miles northeast of downtown San Diego. PSA 182 crashed just north of the intersection of Dwight and Nile Streets, killing all 135 people aboard the aircraft as well as seven bystanders on the ground or residents in their homes, including two children. The Cessna struck Polk Avenue, between 32nd and Iowa Streets, killing the two pilots on board. Nine others on the ground were injured, and a total of 22 residences were destroyed or damaged by the impact and debris.
Prelude
[edit]The crash of Flight 182 was preceded by a near-tragedy almost ten years earlier (also involving Pacific Southwest Airlines), when, on January 15, 1969, a PSA Boeing 727-214 (#N973PS) had collided with Cessna 182L (#N42242) on-ascent from San Francisco International Airport, bound for Ontario International Airport. The 727 continued-on to Ontario and landed safely, while the Cessna suffered damage on the right wing and returned to San Francisco.[2]
Accident
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (September 2018) |
On the morning of September 25, 1978, Pacific Southwest Airlines Flight 182 departed Sacramento for San Diego via Los Angeles. The seven-person, San Diego–based crew consisted of Captain James E. "Jim" McFeron (42); First Officer Robert E. "Bob" Fox (38); Flight Engineer Martin J. Wahne (44); and four flight attendants. Captain McFeron, a veteran pilot with PSA, had accumulated a total of 14,382 flight hours, including 10,482 hours on the 727. First Officer Fox had a total of 10,049 flight hours, including 5,800 hours on the 727. Flight Engineer Wahne had a total of 10,800 flying hours, with 6,587 hours in the 727. The flight from Sacramento to Los Angeles was uneventful; at 8:34 am PDT, Flight 182 departed Los Angeles, with First Officer Fox as the pilot flying. There were 128 passengers on board, including 29 PSA employees; the weather in San Diego that Monday morning was sunny and clear with ten miles (16 km) of visibility.[1]: 2
At 8:59 am, the PSA crew was alerted by the approach controller about a small Cessna 172 aircraft nearby. The Cessna was being flown by two licensed pilots. One was Martin Kazy Jr., 32, who possessed single-engine, multi-engine, and instrument flight ratings, as well as a commercial certificate and an instrument flight instructor certificate. He had flown a total of 5,137 hours. The other, David Boswell, 35, a U.S. Marine Corps sergeant, possessed single-engine and multi-engine ratings and a commercial certificate. He had flown 407 hours at the time of the accident, and was practicing instrument landing system approaches under the instruction of Kazy in pursuit of his instrument rating. They had departed from Montgomery Field and were navigating under visual flight rules, which did not require the filing of a flight plan. Boswell was wearing a "hood" to limit his field of vision straight ahead to the cockpit panel, much like an oversized sun visor with vertical panels to block peripheral vision, which is normal in IFR training. At the time of the collision, the Cessna was on the missed approach (in visual meteorological conditions) from San Diego airport's (also known as Lindbergh Field) Runway 9, heading east and climbing. The Cessna was in communication with San Diego approach control.[1]: 2
Abridged communication between PSA 182 and the controllers, and among the PSA flight crew | ||
# = Nonpertinent word; * = Unintelligible word; () = Questionable text; (()) = Commentary; Shading = Radio communication | ||
Time | Source | Content |
---|---|---|
08:59:30 | San Diego approach control |
PSA one eighty-two, traffic twelve o'clock, one mile northbound. |
08:59:35 | Captain (to San Diego approach control) |
We're looking. |
08:59:39 | San Diego approach control |
PSA one eighty-two, additional traffic's ah, twelve o'clock, three miles ((five km)) just north of the field, northeast-bound, a Cessna one seventy-two climbing VFR out of one thousand four hundred |
08:59:39 | Flight engineer | Yeah ((Sound of laughter)) |
08:59:39 | First officer | Very nice |
08:59:41 | Flight engineer | He really broke up laughing I said so I'm late |
08:59:48 | ((Off-duty captain relays an anecdote until 09:00:10)) | |
08:59:50 | First officer (to San Diego approach control) |
Okay we've got that other twelve. |
08:59:57 | San Diego approach control |
Cessna seven seven one one golf, San Diego departure radar contact, maintain VFR conditions at or below three thousand five hundred, fly heading zero seven zero, vector final approach course. |
09:00:15 | San Diego approach control | PSA one eighty-two, traffic's at twelve o'clock, three miles out of one thousand seven hundred. |
09:00:21 | First officer | Got 'em. |
09:00:22 | Captain (to San Diego approach control) |
Traffic in sight. |
09:00:23 | San Diego approach control | Okay, sir, maintain visual separation, contact Lindbergh tower one three three point three, have a nice day now. |
09:00:26 | First officer | Flaps two. |
09:00:28 | Captain (to San Diego approach control) |
Okay |
09:00:34 | Captain (to Lindbergh tower) | Lindbergh, PSA one eighty-two downwind. |
09:00:38 | Lindbergh tower | PSA one eighty-two, Lindbergh tower, ah, traffic twelve o'clock one mile a Cessna. |
09:00:41 | First officer | Flaps five. |
09:00:42 | Captain | Is that the one (we're) looking at? |
09:00:43 | First officer | Yeah, but I don't see him now. |
09:00:44 | Captain (to Lindbergh tower) | Okay, we had it there a minute ago. |
09:00:47 | Lindbergh tower | One eighty-two, roger. |
09:00:50 | Captain (to Lindbergh tower) | I think he's pass(ed) off to our right. ((Due to radio static, Lindbergh tower voice recording reveals tower received "he's passing off to our right".))[1]: 3 [3] |
09:00:51 | Lindbergh tower | Yeah. |
09:00:52 | Captain | He was right over here a minute ago. |
09:00:53 | First officer | Yeah. |
The PSA pilots reported that they saw the Cessna after being notified of its position by ATC, although cockpit voice recordings revealed that shortly thereafter, the PSA pilots no longer had the Cessna in sight and they were speculating about its position. Due to radio static, Lindbergh tower (as per the tower voice recording) received the 09.00:50 transmission as "He's passing off to our right" and assumed the PSA jet had the Cessna in sight, thus maintaining visual separation.[1]: 3 [3]
After getting permission to land, and about 40 seconds before colliding with the Cessna, the conversation among the four occupants of the cockpit (captain, first officer, flight engineer, and the off-duty PSA captain, Spencer Nelson, who was riding in the cockpit's jump seat) was, as follows, showing the confusion:
# = Nonpertinent word * = Unintelligible word () = Questionable text (()) = Commentary | ||
Time | Source | Content |
---|---|---|
09:01:07 | Lindbergh tower | PSA one eighty-two, cleared to land. |
09:01:08 | Captain (to Lindbergh tower) | One eighty-two's cleared to land. |
09:01:11 | First officer | Are we clear of that Cessna? |
09:01:13 | Flight engineer | Supposed to be |
09:01:14 | Captain | I guess |
09:01:15 | First officer | (Fifteen) |
Between 09:01:15 and 20 | Unknown | ((Sound of laughter)) |
09:01:20 | Off-duty captain | I hope |
09:01:21 | Captain | Oh yeah, before we turned downwind, I saw him at about one o'clock, probably behind us now |
Despite the captain's comment that the Cessna was "probably behind us now," it was actually directly in front of and below the Boeing. The PSA plane was descending and rapidly closing in on the small plane, which had taken a right turn to the east, deviating from the assigned course. According to the report issued by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), the Cessna may have been a difficult visual target for the jet's pilots, as it was below them and blended in with the multicolored houses of the residential area beneath; the Cessna's fuselage was yellow, and most of the houses were a yellowish color. Also, the apparent motion of the Cessna as viewed from the Boeing was minimized, as the planes were on approximately the same course. The report said that another possible reason that the PSA aircrew had difficulty observing the Cessna was that its fuselage was made visually smaller due to foreshortening. However, the same report in another section also stated, "the white surface of the Cessna's wing could have presented a relatively bright target in the morning sunlight."[1]
A visibility study cited in the NTSB report concluded that the Cessna should have been almost centered in the windshield of the Boeing from 170 to 90 seconds before the collision, and thereafter it was probably positioned on the lower portion of the windshield just above the windshield wipers. The study also said that the Cessna pilot would have had about a 10-second view of the Boeing from the left-door window about 90 seconds before the collision, but visibility of the overtaking jet was blocked by the Cessna's ceiling structure for the remainder of the time.[1]
Flight 182's crew never explicitly alerted the tower that they had lost sight of the Cessna; if they had made this clear to controllers, the crash might not have happened. Also, if the Cessna had maintained the heading of 70° assigned to it by ATC instead of turning to 90°, the NTSB estimates the planes would have missed each other by about 1,000 ft (300 m) instead of colliding. Ultimately, the NTSB maintained that, regardless of that change in course, it was the responsibility of the crew in the overtaking jet to comply with the regulatory requirement to pass "well clear" of the Cessna.[1]
Approach control on the ground picked up an automated conflict alert 19 seconds before the collision, but did not relay this information to the aircraft because, according to the approach coordinator, such alerts were commonplace even when no actual conflict existed. The NTSB stated: "Based on all information available to him, he decided that the crew of Flight 182 were complying with their visual separation clearance; that they were accomplishing an overtake maneuver within the separation parameters of the conflict alert computer; and that, therefore, no conflict existed."[1]
This was the conversation in the PSA cockpit starting 16 seconds before collision with the Cessna:
# = Nonpertinent word * = Unintelligible word () = Questionable text (()) = Commentary | ||
Time | Source | Content |
---|---|---|
09:01:31 | First officer | Gear down |
09:01:34 | ((Clicks and sound similar to gear extension)) | |
09:01:38 | First officer | There's one underneath |
09:01:39 | Unknown | * |
09:01:39 | First officer | I was looking at that inbound there |
09:01:42 | ((Sound of thump similar to nose gear door closing)) | |
09:01:45 | Captain | Whoop! |
09:01:46 | First officer | Aaargh! |
09:01:47 | ((Sound of impact)) | |
09:01:47 | Off-duty captain | Oh # # |
PSA Flight 182 overtook the Cessna, which was directly below it, both roughly on a 090 (due east) heading. The collision occurred at about 2,600 feet (790 m).[1] According to several witnesses on the ground, first, they heard a loud metallic "crunching" sound, then an explosion, and a fire drew them to look up.
Staff photographer Hans Wendt[4] of the San Diego County Public Relations Office was attending an outdoor press event with a still camera and took two post-collision photographs of the falling 727, its right wing burning.[5] Cameraman Steve Howell from local TV channel 39 was attending the same event and captured the Cessna on film as it fell toward Earth, the sound of the impacting 727, and the mushroom cloud from the resulting crash. For its coverage of the disaster, The San Diego Evening Tribune, a predecessor to The San Diego Union-Tribune, was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1979 for "Local, General, or Spot News Reporting".[6]
The wreckage of the Cessna plummeted to the ground, its vertical stabilizer torn from its fuselage and bent leftward, its debris hitting around 3,500 feet (1,100 m) northwest of where the 727 went down. PSA 182's right wing was heavily damaged, rendering the plane uncontrollable and sending it careening into a sharp right bank (seen in the Wendt photos), and the fuel tank inside it ruptured and started a fire, when this final conversation took place inside the cockpit:
# = Nonpertinent word * = Unintelligible word () = Questionable text (()) = Commentary | ||
Time | Source | Content |
---|---|---|
09:01:48 | Unknown | # |
09:01:49 | Captain | Easy baby, easy baby |
09:01:50 | Unknown | Yeah |
09:01:51 | ((Sound of electrical system reactivation tone on voice recorder, system off less than one second)) | |
09:01:51 | Captain | What have we got here? |
09:01:52 | First officer | It's bad |
09:01:52 | Captain | Huh? |
09:01:53 | First officer | We're hit man, we are hit |
09:01:55 | Captain (to Lindbergh tower) | Tower, we're going down, this is PSA |
09:01:57 | Lindbergh tower | OK, we'll call the equipment for you |
09:01:58 | Unknown | Whoo! |
09:01:58 | ((Sound of stall warning)) | |
09:01:59 | Unknown | Bob! |
09:01:59 | Captain (to Lindbergh tower) | Oh, this is it, baby! |
09:02:00 | First officer | # # # |
09:02:01 | Unknown | # # |
09:02:03 | Captain (on intercom, to passengers) | Brace yourself |
09:02:04 | Unknown | Hey, baby * |
09:02:04 | Unknown | Ma, I love ya |
09:02:04.5 | ((Electrical power to recorder stops)) |
Flight 182 struck a house at 3611 Nile Street, 3 miles (5 km) northeast of Lindbergh Field, in a residential section of San Diego known as North Park. It then impacted the driveway of the house at a 260 knots (300 mph; 480 km/h), nose-down attitude while banked 50° to the right. Seismographic readings indicated that the impact occurred at 09:02:07, about 2.5 seconds after the cockpit voice recorder lost power. The plane crashed just west of the I-805 freeway, around 30 feet (9.1 m) north of the intersection of Dwight and Nile Streets, with the bulk of the debris field spreading in a northeast to southwesterly direction toward Boundary Street. One of the plane's wings lodged in a house. The largest piece of the Cessna impacted about six blocks away near 32nd Street and Polk Avenue 32°45′7.97″N 117°7′32.57″W / 32.7522139°N 117.1257139°W.
The explosion and fire from the 727 crash created a mushroom cloud that could be seen for miles (and was photographed and filmed). About 60% of the entire San Diego Fire Department was ultimately dispatched to the scene. The severity of the crash meant the engines, tail section, and landing gear were among the few recognizable parts remaining of the destroyed 727.[5] However, the impact and debris area was relatively small due to the plane's steep, nose-down angle.[1]: 8
In total, 144 people[7] died in the crash, including Flight 182's seven crew members, 30 additional PSA employees[8] deadheading to PSA's San Diego base, the two Cessna occupants, and seven residents (five women, two boys) on the ground. With 144 deaths, it was the deadliest accident to occur in the United States, surpassing the 1960 New York mid-air collision's 134 fatalities, until eight months later when American Airlines Flight 191 crashed with 273 deaths. As of 2021, it is the sixth-deadliest aviation disaster in the United States (not including terrorism), as well as the deadliest aviation disaster in California.
Investigation
[edit]At the nearby St. Augustine High School, a triage and command and control center was established, with its gymnasium being used as a makeshift morgue and for forensic investigation.[9] [citation needed] Freezer units were used to preserve the biological remains, as San Diego was in the middle of a severe heat wave, with temperatures exceeding 100 °F (38 °C).
National Transportation Safety Board report number NTSB/AAR-79-05,[1] released April 19, 1979, determined that the probable cause of the accident was the failure of the PSA flight crew to follow proper air traffic control (ATC) procedures. Flight 182's crew lost sight of the Cessna in contravention of ATC instructions to "keep visual separation from that traffic", and did not alert ATC that they had lost sight of it. Errors on the part of ATC were also named as contributing factors, including the use of visual separation procedures when radar clearances were available. Additionally, the Cessna pilots, for reasons unknown, did not maintain their assigned east-northeasterly heading of 070° after completing a practice instrument approach, nor did they notify ATC of their course change. Concerning this, the NTSB report states, "According to the testimony of the controllers and the assistant chief flight instructor of the Gibbs Flite Center (owner of the Cessna), the 08:59:56 transmission from approach control to the Cessna only imposed an altitude limitation on the pilot, he was not required to maintain the 070° heading. However, the assistant chief flight instructor testified that he would expect the [Cessna] pilot to fly the assigned heading or inform the controller that he was not able to do so."
A dissenting opinion in the original NTSB crash report by member Francis H. McAdams strongly questioned why the unauthorized change in course by the Cessna was not specifically cited as a "contributing factor" in the final report; instead, it was listed as simply a "finding", which carries less weight. McAdams also "sharply disagreed" with the majority of the panel on other issues, giving more weight to inadequate ATC procedures as another "probable cause" to the accident, rather than merely treating them as a contributing factor. McAdams also added the "possible misidentification of the Cessna by the PSA aircrew due to the presence of a third unknown aircraft in the area" as a contributing factor. The majority panel members did not cite this as a credible possibility. In an August 1982 amendment to the probable-cause finding, the NTSB adopted McAdams' viewpoints regarding both ATC and pilot failings.[10]
The report states that in the PSA cockpit, some conversation in the cockpit was not relevant to the flight during critical phases of the flight. The report states that the conversation was not a causal factor in the accident, but that "it does point out the dangers inherent in this type of cockpit environment during descent and approach to landing."[1]: 33
The two photographs of Flight 182 taken by Hans Wendt revealed that the left wing flaps were extended as the crew tried to steer the crippled aircraft and that the right wing had a large piece missing where the Cessna had struck. Although it was obvious that the flaps were damaged or destroyed by the collision, NTSB investigators could not determine the condition of the hydraulic system in the wing and whether the plumbing inside it had actually been ruptured or merely flattened. Since the right wing was extremely fragmented, examination of debris provided no useful information. The crew may have tried to guide the 727 away from impacting a residential area and onto Route 805 where damage would be lessened,[failed verification] but could not do so. The final conclusion of the NTSB was that even if the hydraulic lines in the right wing were undamaged, the missing flaps and spreading fire would have adversely affected the plane's aerodynamic profile, and in all likelihood Flight 182 was completely uncontrollable after the collision.[1]: 31–32
Aftermath
[edit]In the aftermath of the devastation on the ground, a controversy was renewed in San Diego over the placement of such a busy airport in a heavily populated area. Despite proposals to relocate it, San Diego International Airport, the busiest single-runway commercial airport in the U.S., remains in use at the same site.[11] The crash site was cordoned off by police and remained so for an entire year.
At the time, PSA Flight 182 was the U.S.'s deadliest commercial air disaster, surpassed eight months later on Friday, May 25, 1979, when American Airlines Flight 191 (a McDonnell Douglas DC-10) crashed in Chicago.[12]
As a result of the crash, the NTSB recommended the immediate implementation of a Terminal Radar Service Area around Lindbergh Field to provide for the separation of aircraft, as well as an immediate review of control procedures for all busy terminal areas. This initial rule did not include small, general-aviation aircraft. Therefore, on May 15, 1980, the Federal Aviation Administration, implemented what is called Class B airspace to provide for the separation of all aircraft operating in the area. Additionally, all aircraft, regardless of size, are required to operate under "positive radar control", a rule that allows only radar control from the ground for all aircraft operating in the airport's airspace.[7]
At the time of the crash, Lindbergh Field was the only airport in San Diego County with an instrument landing system. Since the Cessna pilot was practicing instrument landings, the FAA quickly installed the system at Montgomery Field and McClellan-Palomar Airport, as well as a localizer approach to Gillespie Field, to allow pilots to practice at smaller airports.[7]
As a result of this and other midair collisions[13] (including an almost identical one in 1986) the "Traffic Collision Alert and Avoidance System" (TCAS) is now installed in all commercial passenger aircraft and in most commercial cargo airplanes. TCAS gives the pilots visual and audible warnings in the cockpit when two aircraft are approaching each other, and directs pilots to either climb or descend to avoid the other aircraft. However, the system only works if at least one aircraft is equipped with TCAS and the other with a transponder. After the 1986 Cerritos collision, all flights in Class B were required to have a Mode C transponder. The International Civil Aviation Organization does not require TCAS on the type of small, single-engined planes that were involved in the PSA disaster or the one involving AeroMexico. Only aircraft certified to carry 19 or more passengers or have a maximum takeoff weight of more than 12,600 lb (5,700 kg) are affected by the TCAS rule.
Because the PSA 182/Cessna collision was the result of pilot error, it is used as a teaching aid in modern flight training. Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University uses the crash in "human factors" classes,[7] while others refer to it when teaching airspace or visual separation rules.[citation needed]
Don St. Germain, who was an employee with PSA, was working aboard this flight when he died with the other 143 passengers and crew. Nine years later, his brother-in-law Douglas Arthur, who was a PSA pilot, was killed aboard PSA Flight 1771 near Cayucos, California along with 42 other passengers and crew by a recently fired employee named David Augustus Burke. Burke shot his former boss, a flight attendant, the two pilots, and Arthur before he sent the plane into a nosedive, causing the aircraft to crash at the speed of sound. As such, Nikki St. Germain lost her brother in the first deadly crash of a PSA flight, and her husband in the second. Those were the only two deadly crashes in the 40-year history of the airline.[14]
Memorials
[edit]A memorial plaque honoring those who died on both planes and on the ground is located in the San Diego Aerospace Museum, near the Theodore Gildred Flight Rotunda in San Diego's Balboa Park. On the 20th anniversary of the crash, a tree was planted next to the North Park branch library, and a memorial plaque was dedicated to those who lost their lives. The library is not in the immediate vicinity of the actual crash site; it has been rebuilt and bears no visible evidence of the crash.[15]
Informal memorial gatherings are held annually on the anniversary of the crash, at the intersection of Dwight and Nile Streets in North Park. On September 25, 2008, over 100 relatives and friends of the victims of PSA 182 gathered on the 30th-anniversary of the crash.[15]
Depictions in media
[edit]The ATC recording of the accident, as well as graphic footage of the aftermath, was included in the mondo film Faces of Death, released two months after the crash.
The accident was covered in season 11 of the documentary TV series Mayday in an episode titled "Blind Spot". The episode featured interviews from witnesses and accident investigators and recreations of the crash.[3] This episode aired on the Smithsonian Channel as Air Disasters season three, episode one.
The accident was covered in MSNBC's Why Planes Crash in the episode "Collision Course", first aired April 27, 2013.[citation needed]
Years later, Whoopi Goldberg, who had witnessed the collision, referenced it as to why she stopped traveling by air.[16]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ The aircraft was a Boeing 727-200 model; Boeing assigns a unique code for each company that buys one of its aircraft, which is applied as a suffix to the model number at the time the aircraft is built, hence "727-214" designates a 727-200 built for Pacific Southwest Airlines (customer code 14).
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Aircraft Accident Report, Pacific Southwest Airlines, Inc., B-727, N533PS and Gibbs Flite Center, Inc., Cessna 172, N7711G, San Diego, California, September 25, 1978 (PDF). National Transportation Safety Board. April 20, 1979. NTSB-AAR-79-5. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 19, 2021. Retrieved May 2, 2021. – Copy at Archived July 21, 2023, at the Wayback Machine Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.
- ^ The National Transportation Safety Board concluded that the incident occurred as a result of "[p]ilots in command of each aircraft fail[ing] to see and avoid the other aircraft." https://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19690115-1 Archived May 25, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c "Blind Spot"". Mayday. Season 11. Episode 8. Cineflix. January 27, 2012. Discovery Channel Canada.
- ^ "Hans E. Wendt Obituary (1934–2013) San Diego Union-Tribune". Legacy.com.
- ^ a b Shess, Thomas (June 29, 2007). "This Is It!". San Diego Magazine. Archived from the original on April 29, 2017. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
- ^ Pulitzer Prize Award Winners 1979 Archived January 5, 2016, at the Wayback Machine by The Pulitzer Prizes Archived January 7, 2023, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c d Steinberg, James (September 21, 1998). "Lessons from disaster". SignOnSanDiego.com. Archived from the original on September 25, 2008. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
- ^ PSA Flight 182 & 1771 Memorial Page Archived July 19, 2009, at the Wayback Machine by JetPSA Archived January 17, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ The St. Augustine High School Gym Morgue Archived August 30, 2012, at the Wayback Machine by Sarah Luibel at SignOnSanDiego.com Archived June 16, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "FAA Historical Chronology, 1926–1996" (PDF). Federal Aviation Administration. p. 203. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 24, 2008.
- ^ Facts about San Diego International Airport by San Diego County Regional Airport Authority Archived September 8, 2010, at the Wayback Machine hosted by Internet Archive
- ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident McDonnell Douglas DC-10-10 N110AA Chicago-O'Hare International Airport, IL (ORD)". aviation-safety.net. Archived from the original on October 8, 2018. Retrieved September 12, 2019.
- ^ "United Airlines Tests Anti-Collision Device With Initial Success". The Wall Street Journal. November 19, 1987. ISSN 0099-9660.
- ^ "Pilot's Widow Lost Brother in Previous PSA Crash". Associated Press. Archived from the original on July 27, 2021. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
- ^ a b PSA crash victims remembered at morning service Archived May 4, 2009, at the Wayback Machine by Jeff McDonald at SignOnSanDiego.com Archived June 16, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Whoopi Goldberg's 'one really major regret'". CNN. Archived from the original on May 24, 2019. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
External links
[edit]- Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network
- Article about Flight 182 Archived May 6, 2021, at the Wayback Machine – Pacific Southwest Airlines
- PSA Flight 182 & 1771 Memorial Page at The PSA History Museum
- San Diego magazine 20th anniversary article about the PSA Disaster – Archived copy from Wayback Machine
- "Death Over San Diego", Time Magazine, October 9, 1978
- 36th anniversary of Flight 182 North Park crash – KGTV
- PSA Crash Page with map
- Pre-crash photos of 727 N533PS
- Audio of communications between ATC and PSA Flight 182 – WAV file
- Air Tragedy Remembered Union Tribune Article about 30th anniversary tribute
- "Return to Dwight and Nile: The Crash of PSA 182" A 2009 documentary with eyewitness interviews
This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Transportation Safety Board.
- Accidents and incidents involving the Boeing 727
- Airliner accidents and incidents caused by pilot error
- Airliner accidents and incidents in California
- Mid-air collisions
- Mid-air collisions involving airliners
- Mid-air collisions involving general aviation aircraft
- Aviation accidents and incidents caused by air traffic controller error
- Pacific Southwest Airlines accidents and incidents
- San Diego International Airport
- 1970s in San Diego
- 1978 in California
- Aviation accidents and incidents in the United States in 1978
- September 1978 events in the United States