‘Everyone could have survived’: South Korea plane doomed by single fatal error, expert says after horror crash kills 179

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AN AVIATION expert claims “everyone could have survived” the doomed South Korean jet crash that killed 179.

David Learmount of Flight International Magazine says a single fatal error led to South Korea’s worst domestic aviation disaster.

LEE GEUN-YOUNG/KBS/UNPIXSThe jet skidded off the runway and into a wall[/caption]

AFPA landing assistance system made from concrete was built onto a bank at the end of the runway[/caption]

ReutersThe wreckage of the aircraft after it ran off the end of the runway[/caption]

Learmount pinned the tragedy on a runway landing beacon that was improperly placed in the runway’s overrun.

He told Sky: “I don’t know what standards they think were appropriate but other airports do not put the instrument landing system antennae in a concrete structure.

“If that hadn’t been there everybody would be alive now.”

He added that the structures are usually collapsible in other airports rather than being concrete to prevent fatal collisions.

David heaped praise on the pilot for his calm and effective landing and said the disaster only happened due to the wall.

The expert thinks the plane hit the tarmac at about 200mph and went as well as it could have.

He said: “What we saw in the video was the aircraft being put down beautifully – it was perfectly level.”

But, then the plane hit the wall, causing it to explode in a giant fireball and kill most on board.

A number of other aviation experts have also commented on outstanding questions following the disaster.

Gregory Alegi, an aviation expert and former teacher at Italy’s air force academy, said: “At this point there are a lot more questions than we have answers.

“Why was the plane going so fast? Why were the flaps not open? Why was the landing gear not down?”

Christian Beckert, a flight safety expert and Lufthansa pilot, said the video footage suggested that aside from the reversers, most of the plane’s braking systems were not activated, creating a “big problem” and a fast landing.

Beckert said a bird strike was unlikely to have damaged the landing gear while it was still up, and that if it had happened when it was down, it would have been hard to raise again.

He said: “It’s really, really very rare and very unusual not to lower the gear, because there are independent systems where we can lower the gear with an alternate system.”

It comes as…

Only two people survived with 179 dead in the horror crash

minute-by-minute breakdown of the crash reveals how a possible bird strike started a chain of events that doomed the plane

Terrifying footage shows the explosion as the Boeing tried a ‘belly landing’ at Muan International Airport

Investigators have recovered the jet’s black box as they try to piece together the cause of the crash

A heartbreaking final text message asked: ‘Should I say my last words?’

Footage emerged of it striking birds moments before landing – and a survivor said they heard an explosion

Another horror landing also happened in Canada – and a second in Norway on the same night

Air crash investigators are now facing the agonising task of combing through the charred wreckage to find out how the deadly crash happened.

Both components in the aircraft’s black box have been found but search teams are continuing to look through the rubble at the scene.

The crash is now the worst air disaster on Korean soil ever after only two of the 181 on board survived.

They are reported to be a 33-year-old male cabin steward and a stewardess in her 20s who were both pulled from the tail of the plane.

ReutersThe flight landed without the wheels deploying[/caption]

AFPSoldiers search through long grass near the crash site[/caption]

Questions are now being asked however over the initial version of events – that a “bird strike” somehow crippled the plane’s landing gear on approach to Muan.

How that caused the landing gear to fail is not yet clear.

The pilot issued a mayday call only one minute after receiving a warning about the birds from the control tower.

Footage caught a white plume of smoke erupt through the right engine.

Witnesses spoke about how they heard a bird get stuck in the motor as well as an explosion noise.

Details about the deceased are now beginning to emerge – with two Thai nationals on board and the oldest person being 78.

Tragically, five were children aged under 10 years old with most on the plane being in their 50s and 60s.

A 60-year-old man was grieving at the airport after five in his family, across three generations, were killed.

Low-cost carrier Jeju Air apologised with officials bowing in front of cameras and vowing to do all they could to help.

The airline said in a statement: “We at Jeju Air will do everything in our power in response to this accident.

“We sincerely apologise for causing concern.”

The official said it was “unlikely” the disaster had been caused by a short runway after the plane skidding off the end and hit a wall.

They said: “The runway is 2,800 meters long, and similar-sized aircraft have been operating on it without issues.”

A seven-day national mourning period has been announced by the government.

Plane should have caught fire during skid, expert says

By Nick Parker, Foreign Editor

JULIAN Bray, an aviation expert and major incident consultant, told The Sun the crash was “confusing”.

“It appears to be a textbook landing, with one major exception – no wheels.

“The undercarriage has not deployed.”

The expert questioned how much control the pilot had of the plane – as despite hitting the ground with no landing gear at a rapid speed the pilot managed keep the plane “level”.

Bray said he thought the plane would have burst into flames earlier as it ground along the runway.

But, the jet somehow didn’t catch alight and continued skidding into the wall.

Bray said: “It goes slap into the wall and at that point the whole thing explodes.”

He said: “We need to put together the process second-by-second, find out which controls were working – which failed and only then can you come to a proper conclusion.”

EnterpriseThe explosion flung bodies and parts of the plane around the airfield[/caption]

APFirefighters comb the ground looking for items to pick up[/caption] Published: [#item_custom_pubDate]

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