Details emerge in Dubai plane crash

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Doug Lampe

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Posted: 09/05/2010

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates - New information has emerged in the UPS cargo plane crash in Dubai that killed a Westwood native and another pilot.

The pilots faced radio problems and smoke in the cockpit as they struggled to maintain altitude before crashing into the desert outside Dubai Friday, investigators said Sunday.

What exactly caused Friday's crash remains under investigation. The UAE's General Civil Aviation Authority said in a preliminary report the Boeing 747-400's two-man crew was trying to return to Dubai's main airport -- the Mideast's busiest -- when the plane went down.

A U.S. National Transportation Safety Board team was scheduled to arrive Sunday evening to help with the probe.

UPS, the Atlanta-based company formally known as United Parcel Service Inc., has identified the crew members killed as Captain
Doug Lampe of Louisville, Ky., 48, and First Officer Matthew Bell, 38, of Sanford, Fla.

Lampe grew up in Westwood and graduated from Western Hills High School in 1980. He and his wife, Cindy, have lived with their two young children in Louisville for the past 12 years, family and friends said. Lampe's parents live in Anderson Township now, they said.

Just over 20 minutes into the flight, air traffic controllers in Dubai received word from officials in the nearby Gulf nation of Bahrain that the plane was on its way back after reporting smoke in the cockpit. The jet was "unable to maintain altitude," the preliminary report said.

Crew members were unable to speak directly with air traffic controllers in Dubai as they attempted to land, however, because the pilot had already switched his radio to a different frequency and for some reason could not switch it back, Saif al-Suwaidi, the GCAA's director-general, told The Associated Press. "What we know is the pilot couldn't change the frequency ... so the only solution was to relay the messages from Bahrain to Dubai," al-Suwaidi said.

Air traffic controllers informed the crew that all runways had been cleared for landing, but the plane came in "too high and too fast" and couldn't maintain the correct angle for approach, al-Suwaidi said. It passed over the airport before making a right turn toward the desert, then rapidly lost altitude and disappeared from the radar.

The plane -- which has a wingspan of 212 feet (64.6 meters) and length of 232 feet (70.7 meters) -- went down at 7:42 p.m., about 50 minutes after takeoff, in an unpopulated area between two major highways.

Flight 6 was en route to the UPS hub in Cologne, Germany.

Al-Suwaidi said it was unclear why the plane turned back toward Dubai rather than heading toward an airport in Bahrain, which was
responsible for the plane's flight path when crew reported smoke in the cockpit. "It is the pilot's decision. Once he declares an emergency, it
is his responsibility to declare the most suitable airport," he said.

Emirati investigators sifted through the wreckage looking for clues Sunday. Members of the media were kept away from the debris field, located on a military camp.

The plane's cockpit voice recorder was recovered about six hours after the crash, the aviation authority said. Investigators are still searching for the plane's other "black box" -- the digital flight data recorder -- which could provide further details about what went wrong.

Al-Suwaidi ruled out terrorism or other foul play as possible causes.


UPS, the world's largest shipping company, said the aircraft was three years old, was up to date on all maintenance and underwent an
inspection in June.

Friday's accident was the area's second deadly cargo plane crash in less than a year. In October 2009, a Sudanese Boeing 707 cargo
plane crashed in the desert after taking off from Sharjah airport just north of Dubai, killing six crew members. Emirati regulators
have banned the plane's Sudanese owner, Azza Transport, from operating in the country.


 

Copyright (c) 2010 The E.W. Scripps Company and Angie's List

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