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Aeroflot Flight 7628 was a twin turbofan Tu-134 passenger jet, serial number 4352210 and registration CCCP-65816, that was built at the Kharkiv Aviation Plant in 1974 and which carried out its first flight on 24 March of that year. It was operated by the airline's Moldova division and, at the time of the accident, had logged 12,739 hours and ...
An Aeroflot Tu-154B-2 (СССР-85321) landed hard at Chita Airport after coming in too high, breaking off the tail section; all 184 on board survived. The center of gravity was too far forward. [20] photo 13 June 1981 An Aeroflot Tu-154 (СССР-85029) overran the runway on landing at Bratsk Airport and broke in two, injuring three passengers ...
Founded in 1923, Aeroflot, the flag carrier and largest airline of Russia (formerly the Soviet Union), has had a high number of fatal crashes, with a total of 8,231 passengers dying in Aeroflot crashes according to the Aircraft Crashes Record Office, mostly during the Soviet era, about five times more than any other airline.
Ukraine W/O 122 /122 [nb 3] Operating a domestic scheduled passenger service as Flight 1491, crashed 24 kilometres (15 mi) off Kharkiv on approach to the city airport, inbound from Moscow, when both wings separated from the fuselage. Aeroflot retired its An-10 fleet from service following this event. [87] [88] 15 June 1972: Rechka: An-2R CCCP ...
Following the crash, the Ukrainian military said that it would continue to attack Russian aircraft in Belgorod Oblast. [68] On 26 January, a pre-planned exchange of war dead proceeded as scheduled between Russia and Ukraine, with 55 bodies of Russian fatalities being repatriated in return for 77 Ukrainian dead. [69]
Aeroflot Flight 2808 (Russian: Рейс 2808 Аэрофлота Reys 2808 Aeroflota) was a scheduled domestic passenger flight from Mineralnye Vody to Ivanovo, both in Russia, with a stopover in Donetsk, Ukraine on 27 August 1992. While attempting to land at Ivanovo airport, the Tupolev Tu-134 crashed into a group of buildings in the village of ...
Aeroflot Flight N-63 [1] was a flight which crashed killing 48 people in Ukraine (then in the Soviet Union) in 1971. It was a scheduled Antonov An-24 flight on 12 November 1971 from Kiev-Zhulhyany Airport in Ukraine to Vinnitsa Airport in Ukraine. The flight proceeded routinely through takeoff and cruise, but started to enter trouble when on ...
The aircraft involved was a Tupolev Tu-104B registered as СССР-42390 to the Ukraine Civil Aviation Directorate of Aeroflot. At the time of the accident, the aircraft had endured 13,062 flight hours and 10,452 pressurization cycles. [1]