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On 3 June 1966, a newly built Hawker Siddeley Trident jetliner crashed during a pre-delivery test flight near the village of Felthorpe, Norfolk, England, killing all four crew. The aeroplane had entered a deep stall from which the crew were unable to recover. It was the first loss of a Trident aircraft. [1]
1966 Air New Zealand DC-8 crash; 1966 Flying Tiger Line Canadair CL-44 crash; A. Aeroflot Flight 065; ... 1966 Felthorpe Trident crash; H. Holden's Lightning flight; L.
1966 Felthorpe Trident crash; H. Haughey Air AgustaWestland AW139 crash; 1956 Hawker Hunter multiple aircraft accident; N. 1974 Norfolk mid-air collision
1966 Felthorpe Trident crash; G. 1983 Guilin Airport collision; L. Lin Biao incident; Z. 1976 Zagreb mid-air collision This page was last edited on 29 March 2018, at ...
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This crash is covered in detail in the book Air Disaster (Vol. 1) by Macarthur Job, illustrated by Matthew Tesch, and also in Deadly Turbulence: The Air Safety Lessons of Braniff Flight 250 and Other Airliners, 1959-1966, by Steve Pollock. [18] The U.S. television drama Mad Men referenced this accident briefly in the season 5 episode "Signal 30".
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Of the two Trident aircraft, G-ARPT was damaged beyond economic repair and G-ARPI was subsequently repaired. G-ARPI was involved in an accident in 1972 resulting in the deaths of 118 people and becoming the deadliest non-terrorist aviation accident in the UK. A Viscount (G-APKF) received slight damage. [3]