Pan Am Flight 816
Pan Am Flight 816 was an international flight from Auckland, New Zealand, to San Francisco, California, via Tahiti, French Polynesia, and Los Angeles, California. It was operated by a Pan Am Boeing 707-321B bearing the registration N417PA and named Clipper Winged Racer. On July 22, 1973, at 10:06 P.M. local time, the Boeing 707 took off from Faa'a International Airport in Papeete. Thirty seconds after takeoff, the airliner, carrying 79 passengers and crew, crashed into the sea. All occupants except 1 passenger were killed.
Aircraft and crew
N417PA had its maiden flight on February 25, 1966, and was delivered to Pan Am on May 21. It was powered by four Pratt & Whitney JT3D-3B turbofan engines.The captain was Robert M. Evarts of Grass Valley, California, 59, who had 25,275 flight hours, including 8,384 hours on the Boeing 707. Evarts's first officer was Lyle C. Havens, 59, from Medford, Oregon, who had 21,575 flight hours, with 9,248 of them on the Boeing 707. The flight engineer was Isaac N. Lambert, 34, of Danville, California. The navigator was Frederick W. Fischer, 32, of Rochester, New York. He had 3,961 flight hours, including 3,945 of them on the Boeing 707.
Preceding events
The first leg of the flight from Auckland to Papeete was mainly uneventful. However, after landing, the flight crew reported a crack in the cockpit windshield. Procedures considered this a minor problem and allowed pilots to continue flying. Nevertheless, the crew notified airline officials in New York City about the issue and requested permission to continue the flight, which was granted. Captain Evarts decided to have the aircraft loaded with additional fuel, expecting a lower flight altitude than usual. of fuel were loaded instead of the planned.The communication with New York City and the extra refueling delayed the flight past its intended departure time of 20:30 by 90 minutes. The aircraft weighed from the extra fuel. The engines burned of fuel before takeoff, decreasing the aircraft's weight to. The weather consisted of rain, wind blowing from the Southwest, a visibility of, atmospheric pressure of 1013 mb and an outside air temperature of. The aircraft would take off from the runway 08. The V speeds were the following:
- V1 =
- VR =
- V2 =
Accident description
At 9:52 PM the crew contacted air traffic control requesting permission to take off from runway 04 instead of 08. Two minutes later, Flight 816 began taxiing. The crew then asked if they could be assigned flight level 230 as their cruising altitude, rather than the intended FL 330 (. At 10:04 PM the controller cleared Flight 816 for takeoff, but the crew did not acknowledge this transmission.Eyewitnesses reported seeing the aircraft make a sudden 90-degree turn soon after takeoff, along with a flash from the aircraft. The sole survivor reported a loud cracking sound immediately before the crash. At 10:06 PM, the controller heard a loud sound over the radio, saw flashes on the water, and activated the emergency response. A sea search by naval ships and private craft recovered 12 bodies and one survivor. The sole survivor of the accident was a passenger, James Campbell, a Canadian citizen. He told investigators that he felt the aircraft was in a dive, took the brace position, and "woke up" in the water. The crash of Flight 816 is the deadliest aviation disaster to occur in French Polynesia.
Investigation
By 31 July, M. Lemaire, president of the french commission of inquiry, declared that it was unlikely that a criminal act had taken place.The cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder are believed to have sunk in of water, and were never recovered. It is believed that an instrument failure during the climb out turn may have contributed to the accident.
Due to the flight recorders not being found, no official cause was determined.