Bristow Helicopters Flight 56C

Bristow Helicopters Flight 56C was a helicopter flight that flew between Aberdeen and the Brae Alpha oil rig in the North Sea. On 19 January 1995, the AS 332L Super Puma helicopter operating the route, registered G-TIGK and named Cullen, was struck by lightning. The flight was carrying 16 oil workers from Aberdeen to an oil platform at the Brae oilfield. All 18 people on board survived.

Bristow Helicopters Flight 56C
Helicopter floating after ditching
Accident
Date19 January 1995 (1995-01-19)
SummaryLightning strike, ditching
Site6 miles southwest of the Brae Alpha oil rig in the North Sea[1]
58°42′N 1°18′E
Aircraft
Aircraft typeEurocopter AS332L Super Puma
Aircraft nameCullen
OperatorBristow Helicopters
RegistrationG-TIGK[2]
Flight originAberdeen Airport, Scotland, United Kingdom
DestinationBrae Alpha oil rig, Brae oilfield, North Sea
Passengers16
Crew2
Fatalities0
Survivors18

Crew

The commander of the flight was Cedric Roberts (44). He had been with Bristow Helicopters Ltd since 1974. He was a very experienced pilot with more than 9,600 hours of flying time under his belt. The first officer was Lionel Sole (39). Sole had been with Bristow Helicopters Ltd since 1990. He had more than 3,100 hours of flying time to his credit.[3]

Accident

En route, the helicopter ran into poor weather and was then struck by lightning. This caused severe damage to the tail rotor. Though the helicopter managed to limp for a few more minutes, the tail rotor eventually failed completely and the pilot was forced to perform an emergency autorotation onto the rough seas. Emergency floaters on the helicopter allowed the passengers and crew to be evacuated onto a life raft. Despite the high waves and bad weather, all the people on board the flight were rescued by the ship Grampian Freedom.

The lightning strike was an isolated one in the storm, and may have been induced by the helicopter flying through the cloud. The accident investigation also revealed potential troubles with the composite material with brass strip design of the rotors which made the rotorblades prone to explosion and damage from lightning strikes.

The events of Flight 56C were featured in "Helicopter Down", a Season 3 (2005) episode of the Canadian TV series Mayday[4] (called Air Emergency and Air Disasters in the U.S. and Air Crash Investigation in the UK and elsewhere around the world).

gollark: Just do reference counting.
gollark: That looks like my networking setup.
gollark: Their laptop CPUs (Tiger Lake) are now 10nm.
gollark: Not true! Intel is making more 10nm than 14nm now. Eventually they managed it.
gollark: But then I can't ~~complain about their code~~ help.

See also

Other North Sea helicopter incidents:

References

  1. Aviation Safety Network Archived 27 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "G-INFO Database". Civil Aviation Authority.
  3. Aircraft Accident Report
  4. "Helicopter Down". Mayday. Season 3. Episode 7. 2005. Discovery Channel Canada / National Geographic Channel.
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