1968 in aviation

This is a list of aviation-related events from 1968:

Years in aviation: 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971
Centuries: 19th century · 20th century · 21st century
Decades: 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s
Years: 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971

Events

January

February

  • February 1 The Royal Canadian Air Force and Royal Canadian Navy are disestablished as they merge with the Canadian Army to form the unified Canadian Armed Forces.
  • February 6 A United States Navy P-3B Orion flying an antisubmarine patrol crashes into the Gulf of Thailand 50 nautical miles (93 kilometres) off Phú Quốc island, South Vietnam, killing all 12 people on board.[11]
  • February 7 An Indian Air Force Antonov An-12BP (NATO reporting name "Cub") flying over India in deteriorating weather crashes at an altitude of 17,324 feet (5,280 meters) on Dhaka Glacier near Chandrabhaga Peak 13, killing all 102 people on board. It is the deadliest accident involving an An-12 and at the time it is the deadliest aviation accident in Indian history. The aircraft's wreckage is not found until August 2003.[12]
  • February 9 Claiming to be a civilian employee of a U.S. airline, 19-year-old United States Marine Corps 1st Marine Division Private First Class William Lee Clark is allowed to board a Pan American World Airways Douglas DC-6 with 83 people on board as it prepares to depart Da Nang Airport in Da Nang, South Vietnam, for a charter flight carrying U.S. military personnel to Hong Kong for rest and recreation. He enters the cockpit brandishing a pistol and orders the flight crew to fly him to Hong Kong as well. They shut down the engines but restart them when he threatens to shoot them. During 2 hours and 45 minutes of negotiations, he releases all the passengers, after which the commander of U.S. military forces in Vietnam, United States Army General William Westmoreland, orders tear gas to be shot into the plane. With Clark distracted by the tear gas attack, the copilot disarms and overpowers him.[13][14]
  • February 10 .50-caliber (12.7-mm) machine gun fire hits a U.S. Marine Corps KC-103F Hercules carrying a cargo of flamethrowers and rubber bladders filled with jet fuel while it is on final approach to Khe Sanh, South Vietnam, setting one of the fuel bladders and one of its engines on fire. The pilot lands the plane at Khe Sanh, but the rubber bladders explodes into flames after the plane touches down, killing eight of the 11 people on board.[15]
  • February 16 A Civil Air Transport Boeing 727-92C lands short of the runway at Taipei Songshan Airport in Taipei, Taiwan, rolls for 200 meters (660 feet), becomes airborne again, then crashes into trees and a farmhouse, killing 21 of the 63 people on board and one person on the ground.[16]
  • February 17 Deciding that he is a Communist who hates the United States, 31-year-old Thomas Boynton charters a Piper Apache to fly him from Marathon to Miami, Florida, then points a gun at the pilot's head shortly after takeoff and orders him to fly to Havana, Cuba, instead. Boynton requests political asylum upon arrival in Havana, but Cuban authorities arrest him and he will spend 20 months in Cuba, mostly in jail. He will be allowed to travel to Canada in October 1969 and will return to the United States in November 1969.[17]
  • February 21 Seven minutes after Delta Air Lines Flight 843 – a Douglas DC-8 with 109 people on board, including professional golfer Barbara Romack, bound for Palm Beach, Florida – takes off from Tampa International Airport in Tampa, Florida – Lawrence Rhodes pulls a pistol on a female flight attendant and forces it to fly to Havana, Cuba. After the airliner spends three hours on the ground at Havana, Cuban authorities allow it to return to the United States.[18][19]
  • February 24 A Royal Air Lao Douglas DC-3 strikes a mountain and crashes into the Mekong River near Ban Napa, Laos, about 100 miles (160 km) north of Vientiane, killing everyone on board. The number of people on board is somewhere between 22 and 37, according to different sources.[20]
  • February 29 Aeroflot Flight 15, an Ilyushin Il-18D (registration CCCP-74252), experiences an in-flight emergency at an altitude of 8,000 meters (26,000 feet). Its crew initiates an emergency descent, but the airliner breaks up in mid-air as it passes through 10,000 feet (3,000 meters) and crashes in flames 13 km (8.1 mi) northwest of Parchum in the Irkutsk Region of the Soviet Union′s Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic, killing 83 of the 84 people on board. Miraculously, one passenger survives, falling to earth with a large piece of airframe skin.[21]

March

April

May

June

  • The 101st Airborne Division is redesignated as the U.S. Army's second airmobile division and renamed the 101st Airborne Division (Airmobile). Its conversion into an airmobile division will not be complete for a year.[47]
  • June 5 North Vietnam demands an unconditional end to American bombing of its territory.[22]
  • June 12 After the flight crew of Pan American Flight 1, the Boeing 707-321C Clipper Caribbean (registration N798PA), misunderstands the barometric pressure sent to them by air traffic control while on approach to Dum Dum Airport in Calcutta, India, and sets their instruments to the wrong pressure, giving them false altitude readings, the airliner descends too quickly, strikes a tree, and crashes 1,128 meters (3,701 feet) short of the runway. The crash results in a hull loss of the aircraft and kills six of the 63 people on board.[48]
  • June 18 After a missed approach to San Sebastián Airport in San Sebastián, Spain, in poor weather during a demonstration flight for Italian industrialist Lino Zanussi, a Piaggio PD.808 (registration I-PIAI) fails to follow established procedures by turning right instead of left. It crashes into the Jaizkibel mountains, killing all six people on board, including Zanussi.[49]
  • June 19 Fifteen minutes after taking off from Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic for a flight to Curaçao with 81 people on board, a Viasa Douglas DC-9 is hijacked and forced to fly to Santiago de Cuba in Cuba.[50]
  • June 26 Flying Tiger Line takes delivery of its first Douglas DC-8.
  • June 29 A hijacker commandeers Southeast Airlines Flight 101 during a flight from Miami to Key West, Florida, with 17 people on board and forces it to fly him to Cuba.[51]

July

August

September

October

November

December

First flights

March

April

May

June

July

  • Nord N 500 (tethered)

August

  • August 2 Aérospatiale SA 341 Gazelle[114]

September

October

November

December

Entered service

January

February

March

April

May

Retirements

December

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