SwiftAir DHL Boeing B737-400 Crash near Vilnius Airport

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  • Опубликовано: 15 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @VASAviation
    @VASAviation  Месяц назад +794

    This comment will be continuously updated as more information releases.
    Please leave your condolences here.

    • @ChannelJanis
      @ChannelJanis Месяц назад +97

      As far as I read from local media, the plane crashed right next to a house, 12 people were evacuated from the house. The house was barely touched by the debris.
      My condolences to all involved. I wish quick recovery for the injured ones.

    • @Mr.Laidukas
      @Mr.Laidukas Месяц назад +63

      13:30 did the pilot replied saying 2500 ft instead of 2700 that was commanded by approach? ?

    • @VASAviation
      @VASAviation  Месяц назад +43

      @@Mr.Laidukas I hear him say 2700'.

    • @most-average-athelete
      @most-average-athelete Месяц назад +48

      @@VASAviation I've listened it 200 times at least only after your comment :) I think he says 2500

    • @VASAviation
      @VASAviation  Месяц назад +92

      @@most-average-athelete I hear 2700' pretty clear but still that's no factor for the crash. There are no obstacles that affect to establish the glideslope at 2500' or even 2300' as others have mentioned. You descend below the glidepath, yes, but that's ot likely the cause of the crash. 2300' is altitude check on 5 miles. They crashed 1 mile short.

  • @Alex-ws9lr
    @Alex-ws9lr Месяц назад +743

    I knew the person who passed away, hes the one communicating from the plane. It is haunting to hear his voice. He was a great person. Fly high king ❤

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад +25

      My condolences.🙏 I can imagine that.
      I readed that the Captain passed away, so that would mean that the First Officer was Pilot Flying.

    • @kristinasulikiene4364
      @kristinasulikiene4364 Месяц назад +9

      Spanish pilot has died, true

    • @braveworld2707
      @braveworld2707 Месяц назад +15

      My condolences for your loss. Please convey the same to his family if it is possible. Thank you.

    • @Big-zk3jv
      @Big-zk3jv Месяц назад +17

      I call bullshit

    • @sonnigundbelanglos
      @sonnigundbelanglos Месяц назад +4

      I’m sorry for your loss!

  • @andyq752
    @andyq752 Месяц назад +1680

    Incredible that anybody survived at all given the size of the fireball. My thoughts go out to the deceased person's family, and I hope for a speedy recovery of the three injured participants.
    Exellent work, Victor! Thank you!

    • @Linyzas
      @Linyzas Месяц назад +84

      According to local news, crew cabin during the crash, got separated from the burning fuselage. Person who was not in the cockpit has relatively minor injuries, however cockpit crew was not as lucky, with 1 dead, 1 unconscious whole time and 1 who was initially conscious but ... Not at the moment.

    • @miguelangelfernandez1996
      @miguelangelfernandez1996 Месяц назад +21

      What a tragedy...😭

    • @PapaG603
      @PapaG603 Месяц назад +25

      Wait the other 3 people actually survived this? There was 4 on board from what I read. I saw the accident didn't think there was anyway someone survived that after seeing the fireball on impact

    • @roterhugo57
      @roterhugo57 Месяц назад +9

      @@Linyzas The plane did not burn on approach, only went up in flames on impact.

    • @LTULithuania
      @LTULithuania Месяц назад +7

      1 pilot die :(

  • @gardenguy357
    @gardenguy357 Месяц назад +1461

    that is insane that anyone survived a crash like that

    • @deltafox757
      @deltafox757 Месяц назад +15

      Cute sergal

    • @LuKas_146
      @LuKas_146 Месяц назад +53

      the cockpit was separated from the burning part of the aircraft

    • @Arcadiez
      @Arcadiez Месяц назад +68

      probably 2 factors that helped, 1 they're a cargo flight. So whole crew in the front(4 ppl if the info is correct), nobody in the back. So the after part can take most of the impact,
      2nd, they configured for landing( with gear out/flaps) and had a low approach speed, so the impact will be less.
      But yeah, fly blue sky.

    • @yankis.
      @yankis. Месяц назад +84

      Cockpit separation. On-site paramedics said the cockpit was far enough from the main crash site and fire, which helped to safely and quickly evacuate the survivors. That crew won the best lottery of their lives (at least for now, because two are in critical condition)

    • @hannobaali_makendali
      @hannobaali_makendali Месяц назад +8

      @@gardenguy357 Quit misusing the term insane.

  • @Guevara1015
    @Guevara1015 Месяц назад +313

    Rest in peace, I hope for a speedy recovery for all those injured

  • @CarlitoBre
    @CarlitoBre Месяц назад +837

    That's a really fast upload. Thanks for all your effort!

    • @grahammonk8013
      @grahammonk8013 Месяц назад +4

      @CarlitoBre Very quick, this is the first I heard of the crash.

    • @TheEDFLegacy
      @TheEDFLegacy Месяц назад

      ​​@@grahammonk8013 Same!

    • @jimmygadd
      @jimmygadd Месяц назад +4

      Yeah very good to, hats of to uploader, more info here then from all the papers around the glode

  • @flo4401
    @flo4401 Месяц назад +106

    Working at Brussels Airport , I saw this plane coming in and out multiple times. It's really heartbreaking. I hope the survivors get well soon and all my sincere condolences to the family.

  • @bartcubman
    @bartcubman Месяц назад +633

    I was based at Vilnius for over 1,5 year and there is something particular to that ILS approach to runway 19. In my opinion there is an issue with the fly up glide slope signal and localiser side lobes. More than once we had false localiser captures or erratic fly up movement just prior to reaching the final approach point whilst intercepting the ILS. Not saying it had anything to do with it now but the pilot stating “we are still left” is giving me a worrying feeling.
    Sorry to hear it ended like this. Flying cargo at night is also not the most relaxing experience either. Let’s see what comes next in the reports.

    • @jochen_schueller
      @jochen_schueller Месяц назад +134

      please tell the authorities, maybe it can be helpful

    • @wilkas222
      @wilkas222 Месяц назад +93

      Definetly report it

    • @nZym1
      @nZym1 Месяц назад +17

      Im not aviator myself, can you clarify what you mean by "flying cargo at night is not the most relaxing experience"? Does carrying cargo pose extra risks?

    • @oliverlauhamo757
      @oliverlauhamo757 Месяц назад +31

      @@nZym1 Their duty time usually starts very early

    • @oliverlauhamo757
      @oliverlauhamo757 Месяц назад +26

      localiser won't put you below the glide slope but even having to deal with being in a sidelobe at the most crucial and demanding part of the flight can degrade your performance. Not saying that this was a human error but these things have a tendency to pile up.

  • @AmbiguousOne-l6g
    @AmbiguousOne-l6g Месяц назад +337

    I work in ATC myself and also worked on occurrence investigations, here are some thoughts:
    1) There are a couple of readback/hearback errors. A wrong QNH, a wrong altitude (2500 instead of 2700), and most importantly the wrong readback of the tower frequency "118 05" instead of "118 205", which most likely was the reason for no more communication at the end. The first two are not essentially important to the crash, but are signs of fatigue on both sides.
    2) It especially bothers me, that the aircraft was sent to tower freq even though they never reported established on the ILS and it was obviously visible that they were still left of the LOC.
    3) At the end, they were left with 4NM to go until touchdown, not established on the ILS, still being sent to tower and after reading back the wrong tower frequency they had no radio contact with ATC, still going too fast, not configured for landing... with so many things at once, there must have been enormous workload in the cockpit, while 4 miles from touch down equals 1,5 - 2 minutes remaining. That leaves much room for errors.
    Possible Icing issue leading to stall, possible mechanical issue, possible medical issue, possible issue with the ILS GS... Could legit be anything at this time, so no need for speculations. Wait for the investigations.

    • @VASAviation
      @VASAviation  Месяц назад +48

      QNH readback was correct the second time. Altitude assigned readback was correct

    • @Rinnmeister
      @Rinnmeister Месяц назад +36

      @@VASAviation Victor, I really appreciate your videos and love how @blancolirio (big thanks for awesome channel to you too Juan!!) reference you a lot. So big thanks!!
      Gotta say regarding the altitude readback I also hear the pilot saying 2500 feet, listened to it with Bose-headphones...might not have mattered, but just wanted to chime in.

    • @andij605
      @andij605 Месяц назад +24

      there was not a single readback where everything was correct. it seems like they were really tired.

    • @Whyyouthis
      @Whyyouthis Месяц назад +23

      It was 5.30 am in Vilnius and 4.30 in Leipzig. The plane must have departed around 3 in the morning (germany time), which is a really sensitive time for ones awareness. I wonder wether the crew of the plane was ending their day or starting. When I wrote my master thesis I switched to living nightime. After 5 am my brain would just shut down even if i woke up at midnight.

    • @AmbiguousOne-l6g
      @AmbiguousOne-l6g Месяц назад +21

      @@VASAviation Yes the 2nd QNH was correct, but 1st was not and was not corrected, which is a sign of fatigue or lack of awareness, same for the 2700/2500 feet readback/hearback. Both of these were not relevant later on, but for the overall picture.

  • @gee3883
    @gee3883 Месяц назад +521

    I was checking in at Vilnius airport when this crashed and didn't hear anything, I was very surprised to only hear about it once I'd landed in Luton. Our flight was delayed but the pilot just said due to an incident with the fire brigade.😳 crazy times. R.I.P to the pilot.

    • @Ig86
      @Ig86 Месяц назад +127

      Why should he put into unnecessary stress all the passengers in his airplane? You never know how people can react including unmanaged panic attacks.

    • @gee3883
      @gee3883 Месяц назад +52

      @@Ig86 I'm not suggesting he told us🙄doh ., I'm just surprised that at the airport it was all very quiet and business as normal.

    • @thomasdalton1508
      @thomasdalton1508 Месяц назад +117

      I guess with the crash happening outside the airport boundary, the only direct impact on the airport is that they don't have their fire engines because they have left the airport to respond to the crash. They can't operate without fire engines. So technically your pilot was accurate - it was the absence of the fire brigade rather than the crash itself that delayed you.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад +8

      @@thomasdalton1508 Indeed.

    • @viliukas15
      @viliukas15 Месяц назад +20

      @@thomasdalton1508 that is exactly what happened. Spot on. ICAO requirements

  • @mezlay2
    @mezlay2 Месяц назад +321

    Sheeshhh how anyone inside that plane survived is beyond crazy

    • @LuKas_146
      @LuKas_146 Месяц назад +26

      the cockpit was separated from the burning part of the aircraft

    • @aor3200
      @aor3200 Месяц назад +3

      @@LuKas_146 another 2 crew members were behind pilots ? Front part of the plane.. ?

    • @OOpSjm
      @OOpSjm Месяц назад +30

      @@aor3200 Where else would they be? Strapped to the cargo pallets?

    • @aor3200
      @aor3200 Месяц назад +4

      @@OOpSjm 🙄

    • @LTULithuania
      @LTULithuania Месяц назад +2

      1 pilot die

  • @piparalegal2019
    @piparalegal2019 Месяц назад +161

    Wow. This was a quick grab and upload. Thanks for this information, Victor. My sincerest condolences to the family of the deceased, and well wishes for swift recovery to those injured in this incident.

  • @surimi7283
    @surimi7283 Месяц назад +41

    I'm sorry to hear that, and thanksfor the quick upload. My condolences to the victim's family. I hope the others make a full recovery, and the cause of the accident is found quickly.

  • @captainsalty9579
    @captainsalty9579 Месяц назад +495

    Should be noted that approach gave the wrong ATC frequency (Vilnius tower is 118.205, the given frequency was 118.5 and the read back was 118.05). That's possibly a distraction factor and that's most likely why after the transfer we didn't hear from postman again. That's also why both frequencies gave a landing clearance, in hopes that postman was on one of them

    • @VASAviation
      @VASAviation  Месяц назад +299

      Nice point. After watching again I realize that Approach indeed says ONE ONE EIGHT TWO ZERO FIVE. Quite fast, difficult to hear. Then for Postman I clearly hear ONE ONE EIGHT ZERO FIVE. Definitely read back the wrong frequency. Shouldn't be much of a factor since frequencies are listed in charts. You call a couple times without reply, either you come back to previous frequency for confirmation or you switch to the correct frequency yourself.

    • @samiraperi467
      @samiraperi467 Месяц назад +101

      Should also be noted that at 1:31 18D doesn't read back the correct altitude.

    • @captainsalty9579
      @captainsalty9579 Месяц назад +74

      @@VASAviation the issue with that is it might not be a factor at 10 miles or more, but you don't have much time at 4 miles, could be quite a distracting factor taking into account they were overspeeding (judging by the localiser overshoot which only happens when people don't follow speed restrictions) and also considering they were in full IFR weather up until 800-900 FT. You won't be looking at charts for the frequencies at this stage of flight

    • @VASAviation
      @VASAviation  Месяц назад +36

      @@samiraperi467 he, he did read it back correctly.

    • @tadass.2675
      @tadass.2675 Месяц назад +96

      ​@@VASAviationour lithuanian atc rules demand that you say "decimal" when mentioning comma. She didnt and that added to the mistake list.

  • @Noledad77
    @Noledad77 Месяц назад +26

    Wow, RIP to the member who perished, and well-wishes for a full and speedy recovery to the ones who survived.

  • @TheShowblox
    @TheShowblox Месяц назад +10

    Prayers for the two pilots who are in critical condition🕊️

  • @paulpaulsen7777
    @paulpaulsen7777 Месяц назад +99

    3:05 You can see the angle of landing lights suddenly changes and go down about 4 seconds later, like the descending flightpath changed abruptly to steeper. Many possibilities: sudden loss of elevator control, unintended deactivation of ILS approach on autopilot, intended deactivation for manual final and trim settings wrong, sudden stalling due to deactivated speed/ thrust control, flaps not extended enough...

    • @hannobaali_makendali
      @hannobaali_makendali Месяц назад +15

      PILOT ERROR

    • @paulpaulsen7777
      @paulpaulsen7777 Месяц назад +14

      @@hannobaali_makendaliWe cannot tell yet anything. If elevator control is lost due to fire in aft section, this also could happen.

    • @hannobaali_makendali
      @hannobaali_makendali Месяц назад +8

      @@paulpaulsen7777 ii call PILOT ERROR. They simply fcuked up.
      (ii’m a retired Aviation Engineer)

    • @over9000andback
      @over9000andback Месяц назад +40

      Armchair pilot reporting for duty! I know with 100% certainty what happened, trust me.

    • @Megaddd07
      @Megaddd07 Месяц назад +9

      forward cargo shift would explain it (they were slowing down in a slight nose down attitude)

  • @6etallr
    @6etallr Месяц назад +237

    Flown into Vilnius countless times. The approach is a straightforward one. The behavior of the plane looks like it dropped suddenly the last few hundred feet- be that wind sheer, control input error or mechanical, its a sad day for those involed.

    • @g1344304
      @g1344304 Месяц назад +82

      Pure speculation but more likely autopilot/autothrottle related failure or misuse/misunderstanding by the pilots, could be similar to the AMS crash - ILS capture without autothrottle (for various reasons), attempting to capture the glide from above with incorrect modes etc.
      Source - pilot with over 10,000hrs on Boeings

    • @tomit-nl
      @tomit-nl Месяц назад

      @@g1344304 something like that seems plausible yes, it looks like the plane goes in a lineair way all the way down to the crash site.

    • @LionBlu2000
      @LionBlu2000 Месяц назад +4

      Seems like sudden loss of power maybe?

    • @thegoalie5233
      @thegoalie5233 Месяц назад +17

      @@g1344304 Like you said pure speculation but from the CCTV footage the aircraft appears to be on a fairly stable glide, looks right for a 3 degrees glide and the V/S increases rapidly a few feet from the ground. Could be something with the A/T like you said with the AMS crash but I don't think it was related to capturing the glide from above as it looks stable for a few seconds there.

    • @gruselhaus
      @gruselhaus Месяц назад +9

      looks like a CG shift to me. Maybe a sudden cargo move

  • @carolinelvsewe
    @carolinelvsewe Месяц назад +6

    Condolences to the family of deceased and 🙏 for those injured. Amazing quick footage, Victor.

  • @stscc01
    @stscc01 Месяц назад +14

    As always, you're the best source of information on an incident or accident.
    Thanks for your invaluable work!

  • @unbekannt4637
    @unbekannt4637 Месяц назад +174

    Got goosebumps hearing the twr controller after the crash :(

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад +48

      Yes - his shaken voice and obvious attempt to stay calm.

  • @commonsense31
    @commonsense31 Месяц назад +6

    RIP. And that’s insane how 3 of the crew survived with minor injuries!

    • @Domas666
      @Domas666 Месяц назад +4

      1 with minor injuries and 2 in critical condition, unfortunately

  • @bond_andrew
    @bond_andrew Месяц назад +88

    Based on the given data, pilots were flying IRKAL 2B arrival with ILS Z RWY 19 approach. MIZOP point minimums are 5000 feet and max 230 kt. After that, take the right turn heading 104 to VI412 (to intercept the ILS beacon), which you need to intercept at 3000 feet (max 210 kt). Next, fly the runway heading at 194 to D6.2 at 2700 feet, which is 6.2 miles from the runway threshold. This is the point where G/S must be alive, and the 3-degree descent must be maintained. It must have a stabilized approach (the aeroplane must be fully prepared for landing). From 3:04 to 3:07, you can observe a good 3-degree descent. However, at 3:08, you might notice the "dive" manoeuvre. I'm not sure about the pilot flying, but at least the pilot monitoring felt distracted.
    Several mode videos are available from the Lithuanian mass media. One shows an airplane pitching its nose up just moments before the crash. This could have been an instinctive attempt to recover from the rapid altitude loss. For me, it seems like the crew made some fatal mistakes during the arrival/approach phases. The wrong altimeter setting can be a potential reason for that. The airplane was missing some 200 feet of altitude. When pilots noticed that, they pitched nose up, but it was too late. However, that won't explain the dive moment.
    Lithuanian authorities have little to no experience in air crash investigations. As it was a US plane, NTSB will provide all the help needed. I would bet on a pilot error or technical failure as two major factors, with minor mistakes from ATC.

    • @roxair1
      @roxair1 Месяц назад +17

      First it is always a bad habit and disrespectful to the victims to speculate on reasons without the data. Second it is kinda arrogant to dis on the Lithuanian authorities, who will first and foremost be supported by European investigators. US is only in because it is a Boeing. Again.

    • @christopherrobinson7541
      @christopherrobinson7541 Месяц назад +3

      The limited communication with the aircraft did not confirm that they were established on the glideslope.

    • @bond_andrew
      @bond_andrew Месяц назад +32

      @@roxair1@roxair1 I do not act disrespectfully to the victims. Or would you say NTSB or EASA are acting disrespectfully? I'm a forensic investigator myself. You must draw assumptions from your initial data. My data came from VASAviation, ATC, and Flightradar24 data. I draw my initial assumptions based on that data. Investigation will reveal evidence and will either prove or deny assumptions made.
      I was born in Lithuania and lived there until 2010. Today, Lithuanian authorities officially state that they have almost zero experience in such accidents.
      And finally, I said, "As it was a US plane, NTSB will provide all the help needed". Did I say something wrong? Of course, the EASA (European Union Aviation Safety Agency) will play an equally crucial part in this investigation.
      I'm sorry, but I would very much disagree with you blaming me for being disrespectful.

    • @chrisbradley1192
      @chrisbradley1192 Месяц назад +5

      I noticed the nose-down attitude change at 3:08 also.

    • @pjhaebe
      @pjhaebe Месяц назад +8

      ​@@bond_andrewSome people don't appreciate facts, not your fault. They revel in creating drama where there is none.

  • @legit.peasant
    @legit.peasant Месяц назад +85

    It's a horrible day for aviation... my condolences to everyone's families affected by this.
    R.I.P

    • @tombley5760
      @tombley5760 Месяц назад

      What else happened?

    • @ChasingMyTravelDreams
      @ChasingMyTravelDreams Месяц назад +8

      @@tombley5760Russian Sukhoi superjet 100 had a bad landing and caught fire in Antalya, Turkey.

    • @ChasingMyTravelDreams
      @ChasingMyTravelDreams Месяц назад +3

      @VASAaviation would you be able to look into that one? A45051 Sochi to Antalya. Thank you!!!

  • @QuaplesYT
    @QuaplesYT Месяц назад +1

    I literally almost burst into tears reading the title… so sad. I hope they’re ok and recover from something like this. My prayers go out to them.

  • @ericwiklund4168
    @ericwiklund4168 Месяц назад +105

    How did 3 out of 4 people on that plane survive that?!

    • @tadass.2675
      @tadass.2675 Месяц назад +42

      Airplane was very slow, very low, quite safe and airport and emergency services were nearby. And probably everybody was sitting at the front so didnt get into the "mincer".

    • @DanielsPolitics1
      @DanielsPolitics1 Месяц назад +2

      @@tadass.2675Do we know if the three evacuated, or did they have to be extracted?

    • @Magyar9Andras
      @Magyar9Andras Месяц назад +35

      @@tadass.2675 Well 150kts is not slow :D

    • @Kislo7nik
      @Kislo7nik Месяц назад +5

      @@DanielsPolitics1 At least some of them had to be extracted according to local news.

    • @DanielsPolitics1
      @DanielsPolitics1 Месяц назад +1

      @ Oh, that’s not good. Do we know how quickly the airport fire service got to the scene?

  • @johnhopkins4920
    @johnhopkins4920 Месяц назад +10

    Thank you Victor, for the speedy upload. Much appreciated.

  • @slyfoxyandalifesaver
    @slyfoxyandalifesaver Месяц назад +121

    It was so lucky that there wasn't more deaths from people inside their homes, my thoughts are with the family of the deceased.
    Lets hope this isn't anything narfarious.

    • @DanielsPolitics1
      @DanielsPolitics1 Месяц назад +2

      I think anything nefarious is very unlikely. We will all be aware of the DHL fire, but there is nothing here to suggest an explosion or fire.

    • @donmoore7785
      @donmoore7785 Месяц назад +1

      Something "nefarious"? Like a member of the crew intentionally crashed it? What evidence is there to suggest that???

    • @MJ-uk6lu
      @MJ-uk6lu Месяц назад +6

      @@donmoore7785 People suspect Putin, but there's no evidence for that

    • @redmanish
      @redmanish Месяц назад +10

      @@donmoore7785 People are understandably somewhat jumpy because there had been concerns over the last few weeks regarding Russians seeding planes with explosive cargo (this actually happened on DHL flights in Germany and the UK) but this certainly doesn’t seem to case here. At first glance it seems to be either a configuration issue or getting behind the plane to close to the ground to recover, but it’ll be interesting to see what the report says and find out the true cause.

    • @aldra744
      @aldra744 Месяц назад

      this is insane as it is in a city with high populated multistory buildings and other houses I live near by, sometimes it looks like pilot in last seconds did everything to avoid houses and more deaths, you can not find better place to crash on approach to Vilnius airport then that one how macabre it could sound... god bless pilot

  • @davidlawrence3230
    @davidlawrence3230 Месяц назад +9

    Look at that established approach and then sudden change right before terrain.. man, RIP.

    • @davidblurton7158
      @davidblurton7158 Месяц назад

      looked ok then seemed to nose in,, weather looked ok,,, its a strange one

    • @Vpmatt
      @Vpmatt Месяц назад +1

      @@davidblurton7158 They pulled up sharply right before impact.

    • @davidblurton7158
      @davidblurton7158 Месяц назад

      @@Vpmatt yeah the other vid shows it better,, too low maby and stalled it,,, guess we will find out soon enough very sad

  • @FreshTillDeath56
    @FreshTillDeath56 Месяц назад +7

    Thanks, Vic. Your updates are the best. We need to hear Juan Browne's thoughts on it next.

  • @chrisbysize
    @chrisbysize Месяц назад +32

    Looks like an unstable approach compared to 18.11.2024 data.
    At 840m 263 km/h on 18.11.2024 vs. 391 km/h on 25.11.2024
    At 450m 252 km/h on 18.11.2024 vs. 322 km/h on 25.11.2024
    The question for authorization of ILS marker is also a bit odd.

    • @rudySTi
      @rudySTi Месяц назад

      The lower speed is consistent with what looks like a stall from the video. Can any pilots in the comments confirm whether you can stall at that speed, the angle of attack didn't look that steep

    • @kefirtruskawkowy
      @kefirtruskawkowy Месяц назад +13

      @@rudySTi what lower speed, today had higher speed.

    • @rudySTi
      @rudySTi Месяц назад +1

      @@kefirtruskawkowyyou are correct. My bad

    • @jemand8462
      @jemand8462 Месяц назад +1

      @@rudySTi you can stall at any speed. you can even stall while flight straight downwards. It's all about the angle of attack. If you pull too hard, you're gonna stall and as the flight controls react much more sensitive in higher speeds, an overreaction can lead to a stall easily. Looking at the video though, the reason wasn't a stall, the aircraft was very fast and had a normal angle of attack. The stall only seemed to happen right before the impact.

    • @xiami8693
      @xiami8693 Месяц назад +3

      agree on unstable approach.
      Noticed high vertical speed
      Something strange before crash, increased the angle down as if plane stalled the last second and then hard pull up and after that wing dropped and crashed

  • @gogovideo10
    @gogovideo10 Месяц назад +5

    When they said there was survivors, I thought they meant on the ground. It's an absolute miracle anyone made it out of that alive.

    • @Shit_I_Missed.
      @Shit_I_Missed. Месяц назад

      People survive final approach crashes all the time. It's not the work of a divine agent, it's literally physics of not so speedy thing doing what its supposed to be doing. Asiana Airlines Flight 214 struck the seawall at SFO, broke apart, flung passengers and crew onto the runway, caught fire and burned to the shell, and out of 300+ people only 3 died.

    • @timis200
      @timis200 Месяц назад +1

      There were 2 pilots and 2 crew members. 1 pilot dead, 1 in critical condition. 2 with non critical injuries.

  • @consortiumxf
    @consortiumxf Месяц назад +64

    While the incorrect altitude read-back may not be a factor as far as terrain obstacles, it does potentially point to an overall problem of fatigue, task saturation, other factors, etc. Also approach giving the incorrect ATC frequency just adds to the swiss cheese model. RIP to the pilot and healing energy to the survivors, friends, and families affected by this horrible event.

    • @VASAviation
      @VASAviation  Месяц назад +42

      I hear the pilot reading back the correct altitude. However he got wrong the QNH first, then his own callsign, then the frequency (although bad spoken by ATC)... Cargo pilots are more prone to fatigue. That's a fact.

    • @consortiumxf
      @consortiumxf Месяц назад +5

      @@VASAviation Indeed. The video of the plane appearing to be stable on final, then suddenly *not* stable is interesting. Not familiar with whatever Lithuanian investigative branch that handles plane crashes but hope to see a thorough report in the future.

    •  Месяц назад +9

      They selected 2700 ft on their MCP (autopilot), as evident by the Mode S data received by adsb fi.

    • @timschmitt7550
      @timschmitt7550 Месяц назад +1

      It reminds me of the Turkish Airlines Flight 1951 crash (was also a Boing 737), which was due to an incorrect altimeter reading impacting the thrust autocontrol, in combination with ILS landing and at night. Pretty much the same situation.

    • @zeynepaydin9856
      @zeynepaydin9856 Месяц назад

      ​@@timschmitt7550hey tim it was a different situation it was at daylight plus many years later it got confirmed the radioaltimeter was not funcioning correctly after everything that happened with boeing im not suprised

  • @seosahm
    @seosahm Месяц назад +26

    Anyone else getting stall vibes from that rate of descent? I'm seeing the comments about missing the glideslope, but surely they would realise that degree of drop.

    • @foobarf8766
      @foobarf8766 Месяц назад

      ADS-B suggests 149 knots so not getting stall vibes here, but if the glide slope antenna was bent maybe (i think there was a storm?)

    • @IslandSimPilot
      @IslandSimPilot Месяц назад +2

      Icing.

    • @rehepeks
      @rehepeks Месяц назад

      @@IslandSimPilot Nope.

    • @corywoodrow3802
      @corywoodrow3802 Месяц назад

      @@foobarf8766😂

    • @Megaddd07
      @Megaddd07 Месяц назад +4

      Instant pitch down looks like foward cargo shift, given they were slightly nose down and slowing down.

  • @Armuotas
    @Armuotas Месяц назад +35

    At 2:16 She said "...contact Tower 118.205."
    Readback was "118.05, Postman 18Delta"
    No comms after that.
    It's at least second incorrect readback. At 1:38 He said "Postman 18Zero, eh, 18Delta".
    Could this somehow contribute to the accident? Was the pilot too tired?

    • @JJM2222
      @JJM2222 Месяц назад +1

      Just ESL

    • @MyGreeed
      @MyGreeed Месяц назад +3

      1. 00:24, the pilot read QNH back 1019 instead of 1020, controller does not correct back!
      2. 01:05, Descending 2700fr instructed, the pilot clearly read back something else (seems to me 2300 or 2500)
      3. 01:23, the pic read back wrong frequency for tower. Maybe the reason why we have 0 communication on last seconds. He was on the wrong freq perhaps?
      Why does the approach control leave it without correcting? It's a shared responsibility. They had wrong QNH, wrong altitude, wrong freq ...

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад +1

      @@MyGreeed This repeating mistakes on readbacks are indeed irritating. We don´t know it at the moment but it reads as if the Pilot Monitoring was distracted by something.

    • @Flightbudy2channel
      @Flightbudy2channel Месяц назад +1

      Even if he was a frequency, the result probably would’ve been the same. Being on a different frequency doesn’t cause like this. It just means we don’t have audio.

    • @andij605
      @andij605 Месяц назад +1

      yeah, sounds tired

  • @jonahfinademz8646
    @jonahfinademz8646 Месяц назад +30

    Victor, my condolences to the crew and their families. The Boeing 737 has to capture the localizer before the glideslope will capture on an ILS approach. It appeared they went through the localizer initially and turned back to recapture it. At that point they were above the glideslope and I believe they must have dialed the altitude selector to field elevation and continued to descend in Instrument Meteorological Conditions (IMC) and eventually into VMC. They were descending at a higher rate and for some reason and they flew below minimums which is 200 feet above ground level (AGL). This accident will be investigated but I would guess that pilot error is the cause. They seemed surprised when checking in with approach that the ILS Z was in use due the cloud ceiling. The landing checklist on the Boeing 737 confirms gear down, speed-brakes armed, flaps set. The pilots have to fly the approach glideslope guidance on the ILS approach in order to stay above terrain when in IMC. The many surveillance footage appears they were lower in visual conditions which makes this controlled flight into terrain. Easily mitigated by going around and doing another approach. Getting behind on landing while distracted inside the cockpit with checklist and guidance mismanagement can result in CFIT which may be what happened here.

    • @jonahfinademz8646
      @jonahfinademz8646 Месяц назад

      @@VanAdventuresWithLee I agree

    • @braveworld2707
      @braveworld2707 Месяц назад

      @jonahfinademz8646 You have just agreed with @griffin5184 about leaving the tech info and investigation to the experts but then you post the below crap. I sincerely hope they are extremely acute angled pickets that make up the fence you are sitting on. 🙄
      _This accident will be investigated but _*_I would guess that pilot error is the cause._* 🤡

  • @tubemember21
    @tubemember21 Месяц назад +21

    I heard of this crash jusd 5 minutes ago, yet Victor's upload is 2 hours old. Nice work.
    RIP to rhe FO.

  • @PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars
    @PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars Месяц назад

    My condolences to the family of the victim and I hope the survivors heal well.
    This is a real puzzle. Thank goodness for those black boxes! Them and the testimony of the (thank heavens) survivors are going to make for a VERY interesting investigation!
    Thanks for sharing this so quickly!

  • @PapaG603
    @PapaG603 Месяц назад +3

    May their memories be eternal 🙏🏼✝️.
    Thank you Victor for having this up so fast. Im reading that people may have survived this tragedy. That would be a true miracle.

  • @andregentil6602
    @andregentil6602 Месяц назад +5

    1:29 did the pilot reply “2300” feet and not 2700 ?

  • @hygri
    @hygri Месяц назад +11

    Condolences to the crewmember's family and all on the ground who lost their homes. Awful. I wonder if the incorrect QNH readback is the root cause... Damn. Not a good start to the week. Thanks for all your hard work Vas.

    • @IslandSimPilot
      @IslandSimPilot Месяц назад

      Only 0.01 off on the QNH. From the video I would guess icing is a factor.

    • @rehepeks
      @rehepeks Месяц назад +1

      No it isnt. They were flying an ILS which means the glidepath is independent of altimiter setting. And even if it would have been an approach without vertical guidance then 1hpa difference is 27ft. At 1 mile from rwy they should have been at aroud 300ft.

  • @NicolaW72
    @NicolaW72 Месяц назад +2

    That´s a disturbing start into the new week.😯 Thank you very much for publishing the relevant radio communication so quickly.
    My condolences to the family and friends of the deceased pilot.

  • @FlightLevel380
    @FlightLevel380 Месяц назад +5

    In the video you can see they were mostly stable coming in and then suddenly the descent rate increased rapidly.

  • @igclapp
    @igclapp Месяц назад +3

    Apparently there was a 30 knot loss of headwind between 1,600 feet and the ground. So wind shear may have been a factor here.

  • @jake_
    @jake_ Месяц назад +8

    I am very curious to see the preliminary report on this. Reaching a conclusion a few a hours after an accident like this based only on a video and the final radio transmissions, is far fetched. Thank you very much for the upload and your hard work.

  • @i_am_filipo
    @i_am_filipo Месяц назад +2

    thanks for upload of communication, it is terrible.

  • @Toxedd
    @Toxedd Месяц назад +13

    3:08 instant direction change

    • @rudySTi
      @rudySTi Месяц назад

      Lights pointed down. Did they stall?

  • @marcfair3d
    @marcfair3d Месяц назад +21

    Did they really read back 2700 feat? It's not clearly understandable. I hear twothousandtwelvehundred what makes no sense. Perhaps they understood 2200 and were way below the glidepath while flying manually.

    • @VASAviation
      @VASAviation  Месяц назад +10

      two thousand svn hundred feet. Too fast. But definitely 2700'.

    • @petereef4001
      @petereef4001 Месяц назад +8

      1.31, he readback 2500 feet.

    • @VASAviation
      @VASAviation  Месяц назад +6

      @@petereef4001 I hear 2700' pretty clear.

    • @PaulKGriffin
      @PaulKGriffin Месяц назад +2

      He's flying an ILS so doesn't really matter if he got the altitude wrong by a couple hundred feet. He can see the Glideslope/altitude he should be at.

    • @jflo4073
      @jflo4073 Месяц назад

      They are below the cloud cover. PAPI should be plainly in sight. Also, they 100% have a radioaltimeter.

  • @-Tango_Actual-
    @-Tango_Actual- Месяц назад +31

    Judging by the flight data just before the crash, they appear to have been on a wildly unstabilized approach, likely coming in both too fast and too high. Descent rates of over 2,000 fpm at 3,700 ft, and over 1,100 fpm at 1,000 ft. At one point they began to climb before rapidly sinking again. Very unfortunate event, I'm curious to see what the cause turns out to be.

    • @asandras6769
      @asandras6769 Месяц назад +4

      it culd be a cargo not fixed coretly

    • @hannobaali_makendali
      @hannobaali_makendali Месяц назад +2

      PILOT ERROR

    • @-Tango_Actual-
      @-Tango_Actual- Месяц назад

      @@hannobaali_makendali Maybe, maybe not. It is a Boeing after all.

    • @hannobaali_makendali
      @hannobaali_makendali Месяц назад +12

      @ It’s an old Boeing, a well built one.

    • @ptsteinbach
      @ptsteinbach Месяц назад +1

      The big question is whether or not it had an incendiary device on it. According to the Wall Street Journal, Russia was in the planning stages of an attack on US-bound DHL planes using incendiary devices. This plane was a contractor for DHL. If there was a dress rehearsal for such an event, it would look a lot like this.
      Based on the approach, it doesn’t look like it to me.

  • @chamekas123
    @chamekas123 Месяц назад +3

    2:17 approach gave 118.205 frequency, pilot read back was 118.05. That's why last transmissions are one sided only, and clearance was given blindly by both, approach and tower.

  • @gemberkoekje
    @gemberkoekje Месяц назад +4

    It reminds me of the Turkish Airlines crash near Amsterdam, my first question would be whether they monitored their airspeed close enough.
    My condoleances to the family, and hoping for recovery for the survivors.

    • @vlatkomafija
      @vlatkomafija Месяц назад

      they crashed with speed or around 140kt while turkish below 100. speed was not an issue here

    • @annaroux6167
      @annaroux6167 Месяц назад +1

      @@vlatkomafija Source of speed 140kts ?
      With nose down, and uncontroled aircraft, it's look like a stall on short final.

    • @vlatkomafija
      @vlatkomafija Месяц назад

      @ compare all previous dhl flights on flight radar. He came in extremely fast and low only on the day of the accident.

  • @kartiksingh3278
    @kartiksingh3278 Месяц назад +42

    Rest in peace pilot 💔

  • @_dIIJAY
    @_dIIJAY Месяц назад +7

    2:20 last contact to airplane - a readback to 4 mile final announcement from ATC and tower frequency to contact.
    2:47 approach calls - no response
    2:53-2:54 the aircraft moves slighlty off centerline
    2:55 Tower calls the clearance - no response
    3:04-3:07 you can see the nose getting pulled up
    3:08 the nose goes heavily downside (also a landing cleareace from APP)
    3:18 crash

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад

      Thank you, good summary of what can be seen and heard in the video!👍

  • @Noledad77
    @Noledad77 Месяц назад +17

    I listened back twice and clearly heard "two thousand, three hundred feet". I also see a few comments where the CG may have shifted, but I think that the pilot may have realized they were going down and tried to avoid some houses or larger buildings perhaps? CG is definitely a real possibility, but he could have also been trying to mitigate ground casualties.

  • @joboatthecrossroads
    @joboatthecrossroads Месяц назад +20

    Three people survived the disaster, let's hope they will still be alive.
    Condolences to the victim’s family.
    💜💜💜

    • @UhOhUmm
      @UhOhUmm Месяц назад +4

      The Lithuanian that was not in front of the plane apparently was conscious and just a little banged up, first responders already said he was able to explain the situation on the scene.

  • @j28gulfstream
    @j28gulfstream Месяц назад +1

    Great job VAS! I could not understand the coms on ATC! RIP for the one who died, glad the rest is ok.....

  • @PeterCaptainObvious
    @PeterCaptainObvious Месяц назад +2

    I got woken up by the emergency alert that went out because of that crash, my first thought was "what plane crash?!" not knowing that it has just happened

  • @dan44244
    @dan44244 Месяц назад +2

    Flown in and out of Vilnius multiple times (not a pilot) but high rise buildings kinda seem to come out of nowhere - at least that’s how I always felt. Was never a gradual oh look at the buildings more a sudden „here we are“

  • @penguin44ca
    @penguin44ca Месяц назад +2

    Just saw the Associated Press video of from a ski cam. Oh my they were motoring, and then a sudden hard wing over to the right.

  • @OsamaAlaliThatsMyStory
    @OsamaAlaliThatsMyStory Месяц назад +1

    Thanks for your efforts....one of the fastest uploads

  • @TheRealRoch108
    @TheRealRoch108 Месяц назад +3

    Read back sounds incorrect...2700 not 2500 feet...

  • @TheLincolnshireFlyer
    @TheLincolnshireFlyer Месяц назад

    Thank you for the video😊

  • @pkteamfilms8262
    @pkteamfilms8262 Месяц назад +2

    Perhaps pilot fatigue? It has caused accidents before like UPS 1354.
    + I heard just right now that vilnius tower is supposed to be 118.2, not 118.05 if im correct here

  • @cazrl6023
    @cazrl6023 Месяц назад +1

    Tower Freq is 118.205, and was read back as 118.05 and not corrected by app. That would be the reason for not contacting tower.

  • @JohnSeifert-if8pl
    @JohnSeifert-if8pl Месяц назад +39

    The aircraft seems stable in the video up until it suddenly plummets from the sky. Based on the lights remaining pretty much in the same position the whole time this looks like a loss of airspeed close to the ground and likely not caused by weather or anything like that. Very sad for all involved.

    • @vw72713
      @vw72713 Месяц назад +6

      Same thoughts...
      At 3:07 the angle of the landing lights suddenly tilt down. With this the sinkrate increased as well as well.

    • @EstorilEm
      @EstorilEm Месяц назад +2

      The landing lights seem too high in my opinion, like they either didn’t have flaps out and were too slow, or did have flaps out - but were also too slow. Sounds like an unstable approach and they were behind the plane (asking for ILS clearance repeatedly so close to the ground.)

    • @xeels2708
      @xeels2708 Месяц назад +1

      Yeah, angle of the landing lights seem to indicate a big nose-up attitude until stall and then the nose was dropped to recover from the stall, I don't remember if there is a stick pusher in the 737

    • @rehepeks
      @rehepeks Месяц назад

      @@EstorilEm So close to the ground? They were asking for approach clearance confirmation well before mizop which is ~16NM before runway and minimum 5000ft .

    • @vw72713
      @vw72713 Месяц назад +2

      A lot of speculation going on here…
      737 only has a stick shaker. Stall recovery is like in every other conventional plane: nose down, wings level, thrust increase smoothly, flight path recover smoothly

  • @edanalytics9336
    @edanalytics9336 Месяц назад +3

    Anyone else notice controller gave QNH 1020 and Swiftair 5960 read back incorrectly QNH 1019?

  • @jontom-o1r
    @jontom-o1r Месяц назад +62

    ruclips.net/video/MXyXgSu5CBE/видео.html
    ruclips.net/video/5MHfeqvaBP0/видео.html
    apparently few cctv footage from nearby

    • @monikamackonyte
      @monikamackonyte Месяц назад +3

      Am I seeing it wrong in the first video, or one of the planes' wings (right) goes down and touches the ground? So the plane flipped on the side?

    • @cola98765
      @cola98765 Месяц назад +5

      first clip looks like bank angle and wingstrike, while second looks like massive pitch up.
      Stall as they tried to recover too late?

    • @dvim
      @dvim Месяц назад +10

      Better quality of the first clip: ruclips.net/video/MXyXgSu5CBE/видео.html

    • @dvim
      @dvim Месяц назад +3

      Some scenes after the first responders have secured the site: ruclips.net/video/NaUQVF2MX1E/видео.html

    • @janinsweden8559
      @janinsweden8559 Месяц назад

      @@cola98765 speed too low

  • @hiscifi2986
    @hiscifi2986 Месяц назад +1

    Not too sure, but it sounded like atc said contact Tower 1182 05, with the eight slurred into the two. The airplane then read back 118 05.

  • @Xanthopteryx
    @Xanthopteryx Месяц назад +9

    Could there perhaps have been icing as a contributing factor?
    We have one accident in Sweden (highly recommend reading about it) in "Kälvesta" 1977. They crashed on a parking lot on their way to land. Like a miracle - a parking lot, between residential buildings.
    No one(!) outside the airplane (Vickers 383 Viscount) was hurt!!!

  • @YesYes81812
    @YesYes81812 24 дня назад

    My good friend works for swiftair and has even worked on this exact plane. She is deciding wether to quit her job or not, as she is really shaken up by this. She knew the crew and everything. Condolences to everyone affected.

  • @Pinkdovesss
    @Pinkdovesss Месяц назад +12

    Condolences to all involved

  • @limitbreaker_2132
    @limitbreaker_2132 Месяц назад +2

    Approach controller didn't correct the tower frequency when the pilot read back as 118.05 instead of 118.5... That's why the pilot was not able to communicate with tower.

    • @AmbiguousOne-l6g
      @AmbiguousOne-l6g Месяц назад +1

      She said „118 205“, as that is the tower frequency. But you‘re right, the wrong read back was was not corrected.

  • @talesfromunderthemoon
    @talesfromunderthemoon Месяц назад +17

    atmintis amžina. May that poor pilot's soul rests in peace.

  • @D.Argentarius
    @D.Argentarius Месяц назад +4

    They performed a very steep descent and the speed seems to be higher as usual. Is there a 2 degrees slope? And no answer to ATC and TWR radio calls before crash.....

    • @tuuchen2990
      @tuuchen2990 Месяц назад +1

      Yes, too fast and falling under glide slope, forgot engines on idle and stalling when pulling nose up

    • @vlatkomafija
      @vlatkomafija Месяц назад

      @@tuuchen2990 but won't they notice on the instrument that they are under the glide slope? because they had time to react I think

    • @tuuchen2990
      @tuuchen2990 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@vlatkomafija Something went wrong in the crucial moment, leaving no room for recovery. The radio silence suggests they knew something with the approach was not correct, but couldn't figure out what was wrong before it was too late to pull up. Maybe it was a bit of slam dunk so they were a bit too high and then went too low

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад

      @@tuuchen2990 Indeed. And the investigation will probably have to look into the CVR recording to figure out what exactly went wrong.

  • @SuperMarkizas
    @SuperMarkizas Месяц назад +39

    100% pilot said 2300, on 0.25 playback clear as day it's not 2700

    • @firstielasty1162
      @firstielasty1162 Месяц назад +1

      I heard that also, 2300, but the terrain looks pretty flat around EYVI, field elevation is just under 650". Minimum sector altitudes around there are 2000 or less, so that mistake probably not a factor.

    • @bigheadbig5910
      @bigheadbig5910 Месяц назад +3

      @@firstielasty1162 No. Airport is on the hill.

    • @Caperhere
      @Caperhere Месяц назад

      Try using close captions.

    • @Flinno-k8w
      @Flinno-k8w Месяц назад +3

      Heard that too. 1:28 2300. at 0,5x speed it's very obvious.

    • @infatum9
      @infatum9 Месяц назад

      Captions state 2700. Also, listening up close to a speaker multiple times or in headphones would still make it 2700. English teacher here. I believe the pilots need to work on their clear-cut distinct pronunciation. Not only the mic and radio transfer worsen the audio quality per se as it gets transferred, their English needs improvement too. This is why they use these "Foxtrot, Alfa" abbreviations so there is no ambiguity. Still other minor pronunciation things count. As mentioned by others, observing all these cockpit dials, checking the visual field through the windshield while communicating at the same time all add up to task saturation... God forbid if there were any distractions present at that moment, like checking something on the phone or talking off topic to crew members.
      Pardon my critique and condolescences to deceased. Hope the others make a recovery and we get to hear their testimony.

  • @gpslightlock1422
    @gpslightlock1422 Месяц назад +1

    Great work Victor. So sad. RIP deceased.

  • @MikisMaltipoo
    @MikisMaltipoo Месяц назад +2

    That happened near my home yesterday😢.

  • @jbro0013
    @jbro0013 Месяц назад +1

    Didn’t the DHL reply approach altitude 2500 instead of the directed 2700.

  • @MedicWarrior27
    @MedicWarrior27 Месяц назад +6

    All involved sound quite tired...fatigue???

    • @cola98765
      @cola98765 Месяц назад +1

      Can already hear certain Swedish guy explain concept of Circadian Low once again.

    • @dermann439
      @dermann439 Месяц назад +2

      Of course they're tired at 5:30am

    • @sanantonio855
      @sanantonio855 Месяц назад +3

      5:30 am the controllers were probably at the end of their night shift and the pilots had to start flying in the middle of the night so everyone's tired

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад +2

      @@sanantonio855 Indeed - and it was Monday morning, too => the worst workday in the week.

  • @aldra744
    @aldra744 Месяц назад +2

    this is insane as it looks to be the best outcome what could happen after such a crash, as it is in a city with high populated multistory buildings and other houses I live near by, sometimes it looks like pilot in last seconds did everything to avoid houses and more deaths, you can not find better place to crash on approach to Vilnius airport then that one how macabre it could sound... god bless pilot

  • @g1344304
    @g1344304 Месяц назад +13

    Pure speculation but most likely autopilot/autothrottle related failure or misuse/misunderstanding by the pilots, could be similar to the AMS crash - ILS capture without proper autothrottle (for various reasons), attempting to capture the glide from above with incorrect modes etc.
    My personal opinion with over 10,000hrs on Boeings

    • @joshs5772
      @joshs5772 Месяц назад

      I agree with you here. this was my thought.

    • @dronemonkey2038
      @dronemonkey2038 Месяц назад

      Seems to roll left and pitch nose down….stall on Approach?

    • @g1344304
      @g1344304 Месяц назад +1

      @ when an aircraft stalls (such as trying to maintain a glide slope without thrust) one wing typically stalls and drops first

    • @dronemonkey2038
      @dronemonkey2038 Месяц назад

      @@g1344304 not without sideslip β

    • @Megaddd07
      @Megaddd07 Месяц назад

      it could be forward cargo shift load security failure, given they were slightly pitch down and slowing down. They happen very fast and not recoverable

  • @billbeyatte
    @billbeyatte Месяц назад +1

    Thanks for the prompt reporting

  • @doomhammer5517
    @doomhammer5517 Месяц назад +4

    My condolences to the death and wishing a speedy recovery to the others. Does anyone else feel like at 3:10 the decent angle becomes much more steep? It's hard to tell because the camera isn't stable and zooms out and in, but it sure looks to me like the descent rate suddenly doubles.
    It certainly seems like fatigue might be a factor for both the PM and the controller and possibly a bit of GetThereItus. We're also dealing with non standard phraseology from both sides as well.
    0:36 Controller tells them to expect ILS 19 in a very rushed manner which is likely why she forgot to include the specific approach being 19Z. It's either that or she is giving them the runway and the fact it'll be an ILS but for some reason is waiting to give them the precise approach at a later time (would be a bit unusual, but might potentially be supported by 2:04 where she does the same thing with UTN7022)
    0:39 The PM reads back the 1020 QNH as 1019 and the controller doesn't catch the mistake
    0:48 Controller confirms approach they're supposed to use is ILS 19Z. While helpful, she clearly did not understand the question the PM asked: "Are they only supposed to expect or are they already cleared for the ILS 19". (Admittedly it was a very badly phrased and unclear question)
    1:19 Controller tells them to descend altitude "to" 2700 ft. (standard phraseology is to NEVER use the word "to" as it can be misunderstood as 2. In this case there was a 2 anyway and no one would misunderstand it as 22700 ft. )
    1:30 The PM might readback 2500 instead of 2700, although I can hear both depending on which one i listen for.
    2:03 Postman 18D overshoots final, potentially indicating they are behind the aircraft and rushing things a bit.
    2:17 The controller mumbles the frequency and doesn't use "decimal", then doesn't catch the readback being incorrect. (PM also does not use "decimal").
    All of these are small mistakes that most of us have made before and none of them should cause a crash. They may be one small hole in the swiss cheese model though.

  • @aaprods
    @aaprods Месяц назад +1

    Your transcript of the changeover to Tower is wrong. The controller said (mumbled) 118(2)05. Your text on this video says 118.5.

  • @anonanon9591
    @anonanon9591 Месяц назад +18

    They also seemed to have flown through the ILS localizer and had to turn back to capture it from the other side.

    • @julianstafford7071
      @julianstafford7071 Месяц назад +1

      Looks like they made a large heading change, of course this would be inevitable for an intercept of much more than 30 degrees or so.

    • @johnwkindig1613
      @johnwkindig1613 Месяц назад +1

      This happens a lot honestly, especially if ATC is a little late in giving you a turn. If established on the course before the Final Approach Fix, its usually no big deal.

  • @Jabarri74
    @Jabarri74 Месяц назад +1

    Interesting take on a developing sitatuation, showing the data and comms only you can only imagine the horror of the ATC person in charge

  • @pfsantos007
    @pfsantos007 Месяц назад +3

    Pilot read back 2500' instead of controller's 2700'. Not sure if factor.

  • @svsduke
    @svsduke Месяц назад +2

    I don't understand, how pilots could not see that they were flying too low? I live nearly and all of the aircrafts at the spot they crashed are flying at least 150 meters above the earth , some even higher.

  • @MagoLP
    @MagoLP Месяц назад +10

    They read back the wrong QNH value (1019 instead of 1020). That's not good. Well, I guess they would be too high, but still not good.

    • @VASAviation
      @VASAviation  Месяц назад +20

      That's no factor. They read it back correctly just before the approach when Approach repeats the QNH 1020.

    • @spacejaga
      @spacejaga Месяц назад +3

      You know QNH changes due to weather conditions.... So early QNH was 1019 and later was updated...

    • @Eyesandears04
      @Eyesandears04 Месяц назад +14

      1 millibar error makes just 26 feet difference, not much

    • @stefanocozzi8188
      @stefanocozzi8188 Месяц назад +11

      They were on an ILS .. even if their QNH was wrong .. and ILS doesn’t suffer from “QNH blunder error “ so if followed correctly it would guide them all the way to the runway safely. Had they been on an Rnav ( non precision ) in that case yes .. QNH could have played a factor .. however .. it seems apparent they were visual
      With the runway .. so even if their QNH was incorrect .. they could have clearly corrected visually .. so overall I do t think QNH was a factor.

  • @dylan3925
    @dylan3925 Месяц назад +2

    Crazy that this is already online. Happened hours ago and you've uploaded it all across the world! It's crazy.

  • @Ларисал8а
    @Ларисал8а Месяц назад +6

    Боже, как жалко людей😢

  • @MrSaemichlaus
    @MrSaemichlaus Месяц назад +1

    If there was any stall, it can't have been on both wings because they had enough authority to unfortunately go into a severe bank angle right before impact. In fact, the sudden and rapid decent on the last few hundred meters may have been entirely side-slip because of the severe bank. As others comment they seemed too hot and high, rushed the approach, fumbled the approach frequency as well and lost control somehow by erratic control inputs or inappropriate landing configuration. Maybe they took manual control and were totally not ready for it, or even double input in a panic.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад

      Indeed, something must have gone very wrong at the very last part of this flight. Hopefully CVR and FDR will clarify what.

  • @dwaynebrietzke
    @dwaynebrietzke Месяц назад +9

    Condolences to all those involved. Although I may be mistaken but it sounds like on the readback for the altitude to establish on the localizer the pilot said either 2300 or 2500 feet, and not the 2700 feet the subtitle says.

    • @VASAviation
      @VASAviation  Месяц назад +5

      He said 2700 feet pretty clear. Spanish accent and I'm Spanish.

    • @saintchuck9857
      @saintchuck9857 Месяц назад +8

      Yes, sounds like 2500 to me.

    • @pauliusmumgaudis9538
      @pauliusmumgaudis9538 Месяц назад +6

      @@saintchuck9857 I heard also 2500

    • @fToo
      @fToo Месяц назад +4

      I also hear two thousand FIVE hundred feet

  • @julie5845
    @julie5845 Месяц назад +1

    There didn’t seem to be any alarm from the cockpit before the crash. Shocking that there was only 1 fatality

  • @spearofneptune
    @spearofneptune Месяц назад +17

    Did i mishear it or did the Pilot read back 2300ft? It sounds like it

    • @VASAviation
      @VASAviation  Месяц назад +5

      He said 2700'.

    • @sert23769
      @sert23769 Месяц назад +3

      I heard the same 2300. They did not say 2700 vas.

    • @jinitom
      @jinitom Месяц назад +2

      I hear him say 'two thousand three hundred feet'. That startled me on the first listen, and that is all I hear when I repeat, with good headphones (and old ears!) 1:30 is the timestamp.

    • @VASAviation
      @VASAviation  Месяц назад +1

      @@jinitom I hear 2700'.

    • @petereef4001
      @petereef4001 Месяц назад +2

      Sorry, You are wrong. He said 2500 ft. If you reduce the speed to 0,5 times you can hear it loud and clear.

  • @Jadoo800
    @Jadoo800 Месяц назад

    What was the temperature, seemed like it was snowing. The more below zero the lower the altimeter thinks you are, so you need to add on cold weather altitude corrections

  • @130rapid
    @130rapid Месяц назад +4

    Flightradar24 datas suggests unstabilized approach.
    The aircraft was MUCH faster than should.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад +1

      Indeed, allthough FR24 data should be verified.

    • @130rapid
      @130rapid Месяц назад +1

      @@NicolaW72 Of course, they're not precise enough.

    • @inniyan-ef4nh
      @inniyan-ef4nh Месяц назад +2

      The aircraft was travelling at 173 kts at 1500 ft, and there was also headwind about 3kts at 1600 ft

  • @bumem5683
    @bumem5683 Месяц назад +1

    Thanks for sharing, is impressive for un amateur like me. My condolences.

  • @FlyingMaxFr
    @FlyingMaxFr Месяц назад +6

    Clearly something wrong happened with intercepting that localizer. V/S at -1200 ft when in the glide, no readback from the pilots, they should have done a missed approach if it was even possible

    • @cola98765
      @cola98765 Месяц назад +4

      Tired cargo pilots trying to finish the night?

    • @brylozketrzyn
      @brylozketrzyn Месяц назад

      ​@@cola98765unless we hear CVR the only thing I can think of is the window of circadian low. They could also have locked on false glideslope but that will be clear when investigation finds all conclusions. Rest in peace, FO

  • @Sw-bs3wi
    @Sw-bs3wi Месяц назад +2

    Missed the localiser and then a bit high on the glide. Maybe they were fighting to recapture the ILS. Overcast at 500ft, and with middle of the night ‘get in-itis’ over egged it in cloud maybe? Either way, very sad to hear one of the pilots died. Speedy recovery to the others.

    • @Sw-bs3wi
      @Sw-bs3wi Месяц назад +2

      Or they popped out the cloud, still high on the approach but thought they could recover visually. If in doubt, always go around!

    • @davidb6535
      @davidb6535 Месяц назад

      This.