Alia Royal Jordanian Flight 600

Summary

Alia Royal Jordanian Flight 600 was a scheduled passenger flight from Queen Alia International Airport, Jordan, to Seeb International Airport, Muscat, Oman, via Doha International Airport in Qatar. On 14 March 1979 it was being operated by a Boeing 727-2D3 jet airliner registered in Jordan as JY-ADU when, while carrying out a missed approach to Runway 34 at Doha at night, it flew into a thunderstorm, causing the aircraft to drop 750 feet (230 m) into the ground.[1] Sixty-four people were on board; of the 15 crew four died and two were seriously injured and 41 passengers were killed and six seriously injured; the aircraft was destroyed.[1]

Alia Royal Jordanian Flight 600
JY-ADU, the aircraft involved in the accident, seen in 1977.
Accident
Date14 March 1979
SummaryMicroburst-induced wind shear
SiteDoha International Airport, Doha, Qatar
Aircraft
Aircraft typeBoeing 727-2D3
Aircraft nameThe City of Petra
OperatorAlia Royal Jordanian Airlines
RegistrationJY-ADU
Flight originAmman-Queen Alia International Airport (AMM/OJAI), Amman, Jordan
StopoverDoha International Airport (DIA/OTBD), Doha, Qatar
DestinationSeeb International Airport (MCT/OOMS) Muscat, Oman
Passengers49
Crew15
Fatalities45
Injuries19
Survivors19

Investigation edit

The accident was due to the encounter with a downburst related to the thunderstorm and the effects of which exceeded the performance capability of the aircraft.[1]

Aircraft edit

The aircraft was a three-engined Boeing 727-2D3 jet airliner registered JY-ADU with Boeing line number 1061, it first flew on 26 July 1974 in the United States and was delivered to Alia Royal Jordanian on 14 August 1974.[2]

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ a b c UK CAA Document CAA 429 World Airline Accident Summary p. 7/79 (ICAO Aircraft Accident Digest No. 25)
  2. ^ Roach/Eastwood 1992, p. 126
Bibliography
  • Roach, John; Eastwood, Tony (1992). Jet Airliner Production List. West Drayton, England: The Aviation Hobby Shop. ISBN 0-907178-43-X.

External links edit

  • ASN report