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Paraense Transportes Aéreos Flight 903

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Paraense Transportes Aéreos Flight 903
After the end of Paraense, its Fairchild Hiller FH-227 aircraft were transferred to Varig, including PP-BUH. After many years with the Brazilian company, this aircraft was sold to the Argentine company CATA and eventually crashed in 2003.
Accident
DateMarch 14, 1970 (1970-03-14)
SummaryLow visibility, pilot error
SiteGuajará Bay
Total fatalities37
Total injuries2
Total survivors2
Aircraft
Aircraft typeFairchild Hiller FH-227
OperatorParaense Transportes Aéreos
RegistrationPP-BUF Hirondelle
Flight originRecife/Guararapes–Gilberto Freyre International Airport, Recife, Pernambuco
StopoverFortaleza, Parnaíba, São Luiz
DestinationBelém/Val-de-Cans International Airport, Belém, Pará
Occupants39
Passengers35
Crew4
Fatalities37
Injuries2
Survivors2

The crash of Paraense Transportes Aéreos Flight 903 was an aviation disaster that occurred on March 14, 1970, near Belém, Pará.

Aircraft

The Fairchild Hiller FH-227 was a version of the Fokker F27 (developed in the Netherlands as a successor to the Douglas DC-3) manufactured by Fairchild in the United States under license from Fokker. Due to its qualities, the F27 became one of the best-selling turboprops in the world. The Fairchild Hiller version had a wider fuselage, modern avionics for the time, and a capacity of up to 56 people (4 crew members and 52 passengers). The crashed aircraft was part of a batch of 5 aircraft ordered by Paraense Transportes Aéreos. Manufactured in 1967 by Fairchild, the aircraft received construction number 556 and was delivered in the same year to Paraense, where it received the registration PP-BUF. The FH-227 aircraft were named Hirondelle (swallow in French) by the company from Pará.

Accident

Flight 903 took off on the night of March 13 from Recife/Guararapes–Gilberto Freyre International Airport, making stops in Fortaleza, Parnaíba, and São Luiz. Around 5:00 am on March 14, they reached the vicinity of Belém, facing bad weather with heavy rain and low visibility. During the approach maneuver to land on runway 06 of Belém/Val-de-Cans International Airport, the pilot was unable to see the runway. At 5:30 am, flying below the safety ceiling due to low visibility and loss of depth perception, the aircraft's right wing touched the waters of the Guajará Bay, losing control and diving into the bay shortly afterward, about a few hundred meters from the threshold of runway 06.

The accident killed almost all the occupants, with some bodies recovered only on March 30. Among the dead were comedians Luiz Jacinto Silva [pt] (known for the character Coronel Ludugero), Irandir Costa, and the entire production team who had boarded in São Luiz do Maranhão to disembark in Belém, where they were to perform. Only 3 people survived the crash, with 1 dying later in the hospital.

Consequences

The precariousness of Paraense Transportes Aéreos (PTA) operations became strongly evident after this accident. During the 1960s, the company received the nickname PTA Pobre também avua (Poor also flies) from the society of Pará, due to low fares and the precariousness of its operations (noted after 13 accidents occurred in a span of 12 years). After the accident, the company was left with only one Hirondelle, while three others were grounded due to lack of parts and one aircraft was undergoing maintenance in the United States. Due to the lack of means to fulfill its concession, as well as the precariousness of its operations, the company had its flight license revoked by the Ministry of Aeronautics, ceasing operations shortly thereafter.

Bibliography

  • SILVA, Carlos Ari Cesar Germano da; O rastro da bruxa: história da aviação comercial brasileira no século XX através dos seus acidentes; Porto Alegre Editora EDIPUCRS, 2008, pp 267–268.
  1. Jornal do Brasil (March 15–16, 1970). "Avião da Paraense cai no oceano e 37 morrem". Ano LXXIX – edição 289 – páginas 1 e 25. Retrieved April 7, 2012.
  2. Aviation Safety Network. "Accident description". Retrieved April 7, 2012.
  3. Folha de S.Paulo (March 17, 1970). "Morre sobrevivente no Pará. Buscas prosseguem". Ano XLIX -Número 14884-Página 12. Retrieved April 7, 2012.
  4. ^ SILVA, Carlos Ari Cesar Germano da (2008). O rastro da bruxa: história da aviação comercial brasileira no século XX através dos seus acidentes. Porto Alegre: Editora EDIPUCRS. p. 267-268. ISBN 978-85-7430-760-2.
  5. Jetsite. "Acidentes gerais (ver Paraense Transportes Aéreos)". Archived from the original on May 8, 2012. Retrieved April 7, 2012.

External links

Aviation accidents and incidents in 1970 (1970)
Jan 5 Spantax Convair crashJan 28 Batagay An-24 crashJan 29 Aeroflot Flight 145Feb 2 Cornfield Bomber crash landingFeb 4 Aerolineas Argentinas Flight 707Feb 4 TAROM Flight 35Feb 6 Aeroflot Flight U-45Feb 15 Dominicana DC-9 disasterFeb 21 Swissair Flight 330Mar 14 Paraense Transportes Aéreos Flight 903Mar 17 Eastern Air Lines Shuttle Flight 1320Mar 31 Japan Airlines Flight 351Apr 1 Aeroflot Flight 1661Apr 1 Berrechid crashApr 21 Philippine Airlines Flight 215May 2 ALM Flight 980May 15 Dymshits–Kuznetsov hijacking affairJul 3 Dan-Air Flight 1903Jul 5 Air Canada Flight 621Jul 18 Soviet Air Force Antonov An-22Jul 22 Olympic Airways Flight 255 hijackingJul 27 Flying Tiger Line Flight 45Aug 9 LANSA Flight 502Aug 12 China Airlines Flight 206Sep 2 Aeroflot Flight 3630Sep 6 Dawson's Field hijackingsSep 8 Trans International Airlines Flight 863Sep 26 Flugfélag Íslands Flight 704Oct 2 Wichita State Univ football teamOct 15 Aeroflot Flight 244Nov 14 Southern Airways Flight 932Nov 27 Capitol International Airways Flight C2C3/26
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