United Airlines Flight 610

On June 30, 1951, United Airlines Flight 610, a US transcontinental San FranciscoOaklandSalt Lake CityDenverChicago service flown by the Douglas DC-6 aircraft Mainliner Overland Trail (registration N37543) crashed in Larimer County, northwest of Denver. All 50 on board (45 passengers and 5 crew) were killed.

United Airlines Flight 610
UAL DC-6 N5414, sister ship of the accident aircraft, parked at Stapleton Airport in September 1966
Accident
DateJune 30, 1951
SummaryControlled flight into terrain
SiteCrystal Mountain
west of Fort Collins,
Larimer County, Colorado
United States
Aircraft
Aircraft typeDouglas DC-6
Aircraft nameMainliner Overland Trail
OperatorUnited Airlines
RegistrationN37543
Passengers45
Crew5
Fatalities50[1]
Survivors0

Events leading up to crash

After completing its first two segments, Flight 610 departed Salt Lake City at 12:11 a.m. en route to Denver. At around 1:47 a.m, Flight 610 reported to air traffic control that it had passed the Cheyenne radio range station, and requested a lower altitude, which was granted down to 8,500 feet. [2]

At that point, Flight 610 was scheduled to make a right turn to intercept the 168° course line of the DEN low frequency range, and then to proceed to the WONT intersection, its next clearance limit. To intercept that course line, the plane turned to a heading of approximately 210°, which was a proper intercept angle of almost 45°. If the pilot had configured his audio selector switches properly, he would have been able to hear the aural Morse code identifier of "A", for the north side of that low frequency range. As he neared the course line itself, he would then have begun to hear the "N" identifier, the signal to turn left again, and could track the 168° course line to the WONT intersection.

However, the plane did not turn left, remaining on a 210° intercept heading until impact.[2] At 2:00 a.m. the DC-6 crashed into Crystal Mountain, about 50 miles NNW of Denver. It skidded 690' to a stop and it burst into flames.[2]

Nature of error

It was thought that the pilot, in a darkened cockpit, might have selected the wrong audio frequency switches. This, instead of giving him the appropriate Denver low frequency radio range signals, gave him the Denver Visual Audio Range (VAR) course signals. Both of those navigation ranges used the same audio morse code identifier of "DEN." Both of those ranges needed to be received to pinpoint the WONT intersection- the position to which the flight had been cleared by ATC. If the captain had set those switches to incorrect positions, though, so that he was listening to the aural identifiers for the VAR course, he would have heard only the "A" identifier, but not the "N" identifier, which was needed to tell him when it was time to turn left again.[2]

After that investigation, the letter "V" was added to the "DEN" Morse code identifier for the VAR course, to avoid confusion with the DEN low frequency range.[2]

According to the July 1 edition of the New York Times, Robert M. Byers, a United Press International reporter, observed the wreckage from a plane and reported that the aircraft had gouged out a path 150' long by 50' wide through the heavy timber, about 8,600' up Crystal Mountain. He also indicated that smoke rose from the gash torn in the trees by the splintering airliner.

gollark: It routes... TCP connections, I think, actually... over a bunch of VPNs/encrypted proxies in a row, basically.
gollark: Tor isn't a "proxy-like version of HTTP".
gollark: You could use https://transfer.sh/ or something.
gollark: Git isn't really designed for giant binary files.
gollark: I mean, that would probably annoy Github a bit.

See also

References

  1. Accident description. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
  2. "CAB report for June 30, 1951 accident involving N37543, File No: 1-0050". Civil Aeronautics Board. December 7, 1951. Archived from the original on June 10, 2015. Retrieved January 27, 2015.

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