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Japan Air System Flight 451

Coordinates: 39°24′N 141°06′E / 39.4°N 141.1°E / 39.4; 141.1
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Japan Air System Flight 451
Flight 451 burning with emergency slides deployed
Accident
DateApril 18, 1993
SummaryWindshear on landing complicated by pilot error
SiteHanamaki Airport
39°24′N 141°06′E / 39.4°N 141.1°E / 39.4; 141.1
Aircraft

A Japan Air System Douglas DC-9-41, similar to the one involved
Aircraft typeDouglas DC-9-41
OperatorJapan Air System
IATA flight No.JL451
ICAO flight No.JAS451
Call signAIR SYSTEM 451
RegistrationJA8448
Flight originNagoya International Airport
StopoverHanamaki Airport
DestinationNew Chitose Airport
Occupants77
Passengers72
Crew5
Fatalities0
Injuries19
Survivors77

Japan Air System Flight 451 was a Japan Air System flight from Nagoya Airport in the Nagoya area of Aichi Prefecture, Japan to New Chitose Airport in Sapporo, Hokkaido Prefecture, with a stopover at Hanamaki Airport in Hanamaki, Iwate Prefecture. On April 18, 1993, the Douglas DC-9-41 operating the flight crashed while landing at Hanamaki Airport. The aircraft was written off but all 72 passengers and 5 crew survived.[1][2]

Background

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Aircraft

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The aircraft involved was a McDonnell Douglas DC-9-41 registered as JA8448. It was manufactured in the United States in 1978 and registered in Japan in September of the same year. The DC-9-41 aircraft was one of 22 planes introduced by Toa Domestic Airlines (later Japan Air System) between 1974 and 1979 for domestic local routes.[1]

Crew

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The captain on board flight 451 was a 51 year old male with 16,106 flight hours, of which, 8,468 were on the DC-9. The first officer was 27, with 380 of his 615 flight hours on the DC-9.[3]

Accident

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On April 18, 1993, JA8448 departed from New Chitose Airport and flew to Hanamaki Airport, then Nagoya Airport, as part of Flight JAS 451. The flight plan indicated that it was supposed to fly back to New Chitose from Hanamaki.

The aircraft suddenly lost a significant amount of airspeed as it crossed the boundary line of a passing cold front, and encountered resultant windshear while on final approach. The somewhat inexperienced first officer was not able to conduct a missed approach fast enough to avoid a hard landing. The plane impacted the runway with such force that the gear was estimated to suffer up to +6G. causing it to puncture the fuel tank and cause a fire.[3]

Remains of the aircraft after the fire was extinguished

All 72 passengers and five crew members survived, with 19 people sustaining injuries. The aircraft caught fire as the passengers evacuated; it was destroyed and written off.[1][2]

Investigation

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The investigation launched almost immediately after the accident by the JTSB. It lasted approximately 10 months, ruling that pilot error and windshear was the cause of the accident. It was found that when the aircraft reached 300 ft, the wind suddenly changed and began to sink fast, causing the aircraft to announce a "Sink rate!" warning, which means that the aircraft is descending at least 100 ft below the recommended descent rate. The resulting impact caused the landing gear root to go up into the wing, puncturing the fuel tank, and igniting, leading to the fire. The aircraft subsequently skidded off the runway and eventually stopped while burning. The survival of everyone on board was credited to the fact that the evacuation was conducted quickly and without stop. The pilots were faulted by the fact that they failed to initiate a go-around until it was too late.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "ASN Aircraft accident McDonnell Douglas DC-9-41 JA8448 Morioka-Hanamaki Airport (HNA)".
  2. ^ a b "All Survive Japan Plane Crash" (Archive). Chicago Sun-Times. Page 20. April 19, 1993. Retrieved on December 24, 2008.
  3. ^ a b c JTSB (1994-02-14). "94-6-JA8448.pdf" (PDF). JTSB JA8448. Retrieved 2025-05-11.
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