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Pages in category "Turkish Airlines accidents and incidents" The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total. ... 1979 Ankara Turkish Airlines F28 crash
Turkish Airlines Flight 1951 (also known as the Poldercrash [6] or the Schiphol Polderbaan incident) was a passenger flight that crashed during landing at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, the Netherlands, on 25 February 2009, resulting in the deaths of nine passengers and crew, including all three pilots.
The response included a short list of causes of all Turkish Airlines crashes to date. [9] The cause for the Adana crash in the response was: Not adhering to IFR limits by attempting to approach and land visually in a misty and cloudy weather. [9] According to a Hürriyet article from 1999, the pressurization failure was due to a wiring ...
On 3 March 1974, the McDonnell Douglas DC-10 operating the flight crashed into the Ermenonville Forest, 37.76 kilometres (23.46 mi) outside Paris, killing all 335 passengers and 11 crew on board, it was the first aviation accident to exceed 200 and 300 fatalities. The crash was also known as the Ermenonville air disaster.
Turkish Airlines (Turkish: Türk Hava ... The most notorious was the 1974 crash of Turkish Airlines ... Turkish Airlines also announced an overall record loss of 1.9 ...
The aircraft was registered in the name of Turkish Airlines Incorporated. The airframe had a total flight time of 548 hours and the engines had each run approximately 615 hours since manufacture. The Turkish authorities certified after examining the appropriate records and log books in Turkey that the maintenance had been properly carried out.
Turkish Airlines Flight 1951 a Boeing 737-800 flying from Atatürk Airport in Istanbul to Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam crashed into a field during final approach. Of the 127 passengers and 7 crew on board 9 were killed, 85 were injured along with 26 severely.
On December 23, 1979, a Turkish Airlines Fokker F28 Fellowship 1000 airliner, registration TC-JAT, named Trabzon, on a domestic passenger flight from Samsun Airport to Esenboğa International Airport in Ankara, flew into the side of a hill 1,400 m (4,600 ft) near the village of Kuyumcuköy in Çubuk district of Ankara Province, 32 km (20 mi) north-northeast of the destination airport on ...