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Department of Transportation, Special Collections - archived accident reports of the Civil Aeronautics Board; Recent aviation accidents investigated by the NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board) Older aviation accidents investigated by the NTSB; Aviation studies conducted by the NTSB; Aviation statistical Reports, by the NTSB
This was the worst aviation accident in the Atlantic Ocean at the time and remains the worst ever involving the Latécoère 631. August 29 – Northwest Airlines Flight 421, a Martin 2–0–2, crashed near Winona, Minnesota, due to structural failure of a wing, killing all 37 on board in the worst ever accident involving the Martin 2–0–2 ...
[22] [23] Later that April, investigators' findings prompted the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to order the immediate inspection of Hartzell propellers similar to those on the accident aircraft. [24] [25] The accident was attributed to metal fatigue of the propeller hub caused by improper design and manufacturing. [22]
FAA RI Rank [a] [7] NTSB Accident ID (links to reports) [8] Refs. 2023-01-09 Santa Barbara Municipal Airport, California Air traffic control cleared a plane to land in the same location where a plane was already being inspected. B [9] Not investigated by NTSB [1] 2023-01-12 Baltimore/Washington International Airport, Maryland
The accident report attributed the cause to the pilot's spatial disorientation. [11] On 31 October 2019, a Dutch Air Force F-35A was accidentally doused by firefighting foam instead of water while being welcomed as the first Dutch F-35. The aircraft was grounded for 3 weeks in order to check for damage. [14]
U.S. authorities asked the public for help finding an F-35 fighter jet that went missing somewhere over South Carolina when the pilot ejected due to a “mishap.”
The exact cause of the accident was never determined. Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 293 was a Military Air Transport Service charter flight carrying 101 servicemen and their families that crashed into the sea off the Alaska coast on June 3, 1963. The cause of the accident was never determined, and no bodies were ever recovered. [9]
The FAA announced Friday it had closed the investigation into the massive rocket’s “mishap” from an April 20 launch attempt that destroyed much of the launch pad at SpaceX’s Boca Chica ...