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Scandinavian Airlines System Flight 933

Coordinates: 33°55′14″N 118°31′58″W / 33.92056°N 118.53278°W / 33.92056; -118.53278
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SK-933 Los Angeles disaster
Occurrence
DateJanuary 13 1969
SummaryPilot error
SiteLos Angeles, USA
Aircraft typeMcDonnell-Douglas DC-8-62
Aircraft nameSverre Viking
OperatorScandinavian Airlines
RegistrationLN-MOO
Passengers36
Crew9
Fatalities15
Injuries17
Survivors30

The Scandinavian Airlines System flight SK-933, a McDonnell Douglas DC-8 Series 62, tail number LN-MOO, named "Sverre Viking", of Norwegian registry, crashed in Santa Monica Bay, approximately 6 nautical miles (11 km) west of the Los Angeles International Airport, Los Angeles, California, at approximately 1921 P.S.T., January 13, 1969. The aircraft was operating as Flight SK-933 from Seattle, Washington, to Los Angeles, California, following a flight from Copenhagen, Denmark. A scheduled crew change occurred at Seattle for the flight to Los Angeles.

The accident occurred in the waters of Santa Monica Bay while the crew was attempting an instrument approach to Runway 07R at Los Angeles International Airport.


The SAS cockpit crew became so occupied with attempting to diagnose the lack of a nose gear green light that they allowed their rate of descent to increase until the DC-8-62 crashed into the ocean, well short of the runway. Of the 45 persons aboard the aircraft, 3 passengers and 1 cabin attendant drowned; 9 passengers and 2 cabin attendants were never found and presumed dead; 11 passengers and 6 crew members, including the captain, the co-pilot, and the flight engineer (systems operator), were injured in varying degrees; and 13 passengers escaped without reported injury. The aircraft was destroyed by impact.

The fuselage broke into three pieces, two of which sank in approximately 350 feet (110 m) of water. The third section, including the wings, the forward cabin and the cockpit, floated for about 20 hours before being towed into shallow water where it sank. This section was later recovered and removed from the water.

Probable Cause

"...the probable cause of this accident was the lack of crew coordination and the inadequate monitoring of the aircraft position in space during a critical phase of an instrument landing approach which resulted in an unplanned descent into the water. Contributing to this unplanned descent was an apparent unsafe landing gear condition induced by the design of the landing gear indicator lights, and the omission of the minimum crossing altitude at an approach fix depicted on the approach chart."

See also

33°55′14″N 118°31′58″W / 33.92056°N 118.53278°W / 33.92056; -118.53278