Breaking News
- PHOTOS - Seven Bulgarian F-16s are in various stages of production,
- GALLERY AND VIDEO&: THRACIAN SENTRY 2023 WITH BULGARIAN AIR FORCE
- NATO is sending F-16s to Bulgaria for the Thracian Star 2023 exercise
- Bulgarian Air Force L-39s to be modernized and overhauled
- Dutch F-16s back to Europe (and go to Bulgarian AF?)
- Interim fighters for the Bulgarian Air Force
- Spain to join NATO's enhanced Air Policing mission in Bulgaria
- Bulgaria celebrates 50 years as a spacefaring nation
- EDA’s European Spartan Exercise cleared for take-off in Bulgaria
- Breaking: Bulgarian Su-25 crashed
www.flightglobal.com
Video evidence of an aircraft crash in Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo, on 21 March identifies the type as an Antonov An-12 freighter, and shows it rolled inverted moments before impact.
Images of the aircraft's last seconds show it diving steeply and rolling to starboard, crashing inverted. The video appears to show exhaust trails coming only from the two port engines.
The landing-gear of the four-engined aircraft - originally reported by local news sources as a twin-engined An-32 - is clearly deployed and the trailing edges of the wings appear to show extended flaps.
Pictures from the scene show the burnt-out remnants of the aircraft amid buildings in the suburbs of the city, with little remaining except the fin and tailplane.
Congo's National Civil Aviation Agency director general Michel Ambende is quoted as saying 23 people are known to have died when the aircraft crashed, apparently as it approached the city's airport.
Trans Air Congo is reportedly the operator of the aircraft. Flightglobal's ACAS database identifies Trans Air Congo's sole An-12 as being registered TN-AGK, with serial number 402006. It was built in 1963.
Link to the video:
Video evidence of an aircraft crash in Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo, on 21 March identifies the type as an Antonov An-12 freighter, and shows it rolled inverted moments before impact.
Images of the aircraft's last seconds show it diving steeply and rolling to starboard, crashing inverted. The video appears to show exhaust trails coming only from the two port engines.
The landing-gear of the four-engined aircraft - originally reported by local news sources as a twin-engined An-32 - is clearly deployed and the trailing edges of the wings appear to show extended flaps.
Pictures from the scene show the burnt-out remnants of the aircraft amid buildings in the suburbs of the city, with little remaining except the fin and tailplane.
Congo's National Civil Aviation Agency director general Michel Ambende is quoted as saying 23 people are known to have died when the aircraft crashed, apparently as it approached the city's airport.
Trans Air Congo is reportedly the operator of the aircraft. Flightglobal's ACAS database identifies Trans Air Congo's sole An-12 as being registered TN-AGK, with serial number 402006. It was built in 1963.
Link to the video:
Други публикации
Напиши коментар