Korean Air Flight 2033
File:불타는 KAL 여객기.png
The burning wreckage of the plane at the crash site
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Accident summary | |
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Date | 10 August 1994 |
Summary | Runway overrun on landing |
Site | Jeju International Airport, Jeju, South Korea Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Passengers | 152 |
Crew | 8 |
Injuries (non-fatal) | 8 |
Fatalities | 0 |
Survivors | 160 |
Aircraft type | Airbus A300B4-622R |
Operator | Korean Air |
Registration | HL7296 |
Flight origin | Kimpo International Airport, Seoul, South Korea |
Destination | Jeju International Airport, Jeju, South Korea |
Korean Air Flight 2033 was a scheduled passenger flight from Seoul to Jeju, South Korea. On 10 August 1994, the Airbus A300 serving the route overran the runway on landing at Jeju International Airport in poor weather and burst into flames. All 160 people on board escaped without serious injury, but the aircraft was destroyed.[1]
History of the flight
On the morning of 10 August, Korean Air Flight 2033 departed from Kimpo International Airport in Seoul for a one hour and ten minute domestic flight to Jeju. On board were 152 passengers and 8 crew.[2]
On arrival at Jeju, shortly after 11:00 local time, the weather was poor, with driving rain and winds of up to 56 kn (64 mph) brought about by Typhoon Doug.[3] The crew aborted their first approach. On their second attempt, the flaps were selected at a reduced setting (CONF3) due to the risk of windshear, which meant that the approach speed was higher than usual.[1]
The aircraft touched down more than halfway down the runway, and was unable to stop within the remaining distance. It overran the end of the runway at a speed of 104 kn (120 mph), struck the airport wall and a guard post at 30 kn (35 mph), broke up and caught fire. All crew and passengers managed to safely evacuate via the emergency slides, before the fire consumed most of the aircraft. Only eight of the occupants suffered injuries, all minor ones.[1]
Aircraft and crew
The aircraft involved was a twin-jet Airbus A300B4-622R with South-Korean registration HL7296. It was delivered in 1990, and at the time of the accident was less than four years old.[1] The captain for the flight was Canadian Barry Edward Woods, 52, and the first officer was Korean Chung Chan Kyu.[2]
Aftermath
External video | |
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CVR Korean Air 2033 on YouTube |
In the days after the crash, both Woods and Kyu were arrested on suspicion of causing the accident by fighting over the controls. According to South Korean authorities, the first officer had attempted to initiate a go-around while the captain was determined to land the aircraft and bring it to a full stop.[2][4]
Cockpit voice recorder transcript | |
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(GPWS warning: 400 [feet])
(GPWS warning: 300 [feet])
(GPWS warning: 200 [feet])
(GPWS warning: 100 [feet])
(GPWS warning: 50…40…30)
(GPWS warning: 20 [feet])
(GPWS warning: 10…5) (Contact with the runway)
(Sound of impact)
(Sound of opening the cockpit window)
(END OF RECORDING) |
References
- Articles with short description
- Use mdy dates from August 2022
- Articles with invalid date parameter in template
- Pages with broken file links
- Aviation accidents and incidents in 1994
- Aviation accidents and incidents in South Korea
- Accidents and incidents involving the Airbus A300
- Korean Air accidents and incidents
- History of Jeju Province
- 1994 in South Korea