| 18
August 1993 - Kalitta
808 |
Kalitta Intrnational Flight 808, a DC-8-61 registration N25UA, took
off from Norfolk at 14.13h for a cargo flight to Guantanamo Bay. The
flight and arrival into the Guantanamo terminal area was uneventful.
At 16.34, while the flight was descending from FL320, radio contact
was established with the Guantanamo radar controller. The radar controller
instructed flight 808 to maintain VFR 12miles off the Cuban coast and
report at East Point. The runway in use was runway 10. The flight crew
then requested a runway 28 approach, but changed this back to a runway
10 approach a couple of minutes later. Clearance was given at 16.46h
with wind reported at 200deg./7kts. The runway 10 threshold was located
0,75mile East of Cuban airspace, designated by a strobe light, mounted
on a Marine Corps guard tower, located at the corner of the Cuban border
and the shoreline.
On the day of the accident, the strobe light was not operational (both
controller and flight crew were not aware of this). The aircraft was
approaching from the south and was making a right turn for runway 10
with an increasing angle of bank in order to align with the runway.
At 200-300ft agl the wings started to rock towards wings level and the
nose pitched up. The right wing appeared to stall, the aircraft rolled
to 90deg. angle of bank and the nose pitched down. The aircraft then
struck level terrain 1400ft west of the approach end of the runway and
200ft north of the extended centreline.
PROBABLE CAUSES: "The impaired judgement, decision-making, and
flying abilities of the captain and flight crew due to the effects of
fatigue; the captain's failure to properly assess the conditions for
landing and maintaining vigilant situational awareness of the airplane
while manoeuvring onto final approach; his failure to prevent the loss
of airspeed and avoid a stall while in the steep bank turn; and his
failure to execute immediate action to recover from a stall.
Additional factors contributing to the cause were the inadequacy of
the flight and duty time regulations applied to 14 CFR, Part 121, Supplemental
Air Carrier, international operations, and the circumstances that resulted
in the extended flight/duty hours and fatigue of the flight crew members.
Also contributing were the inadequate crew resource management training
and the inadequate training and guidance by American International Airways,
Inc., to the flight crew for operations at special airports such as
Guantanamo Bay; and the Navy's failure to provide a system that would
assure that local tower controller was aware of the inoperative strobe
light so as to provide the flight crew with such information."

Download
the full NTSB report
Transcript of the Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR)
Legenda:
CAP = Captain
FO = First Officer
FE = Flight Engineer
| FE: |
Slow. Airspeed. |
| FO: |
Check the turn. |
| CAP: |
Where's the strobe? |
| FE: |
Right over here. |
| CAP: |
Where? |
| FO: |
Right inside there, right inside
there. |
| FE: |
You know, we're not gettin' our airspeed
back there. |
| CAP: |
Where's the strobe? |
| FO: |
Right down there. |
| CAP: |
I still don't see it. |
| FE: |
#, we're never goin' to make this. |
| CAP: |
Where do you see a strobe light? |
| FO: |
Right over here. |
| CAP: |
Gear, gear down, spoilers armed. |
| FE: |
Gear down, three green, spoilers,
flaps, checklist. |
| ???: |
There you go, right there, lookin'
good. |
| CAP: |
Where's the strobe? |
| FO: |
Do you think you're gonna make this? |
| CAP: |
Yeah... if I can catch the strobe
light. |
| FO: |
500, you're in good shape. |
| FE: |
Watch the, keep your airspeed up. |
| FO: |
140. |
| |
[sound of stall
warning] |
| ???: |
Don't - stall warning. |
| CAP: |
I got it. |
| FO: |
Stall warning. |
| FE: |
Stall warning. |
| CAP: |
I got it, back off. |
| ???: |
Max power! |
| ???: |
There it goes, there it goes! |
| ???: |
Oh no! |
| |
[screams] |