'Eastern Air Lines Flight 401' was a
Lockheed L-1011 jet that crashed into the
Florida Everglades on the night of
December 29,
1972, causing 101 fatalities (77 initial crash survivors, two died shortly afterward). It was the first crash of a
wide-body aircraft. The crash was a
controlled flight into terrain as a result of the flight crew's failure to monitor the flight instruments during a malfunction of the landing gear position indicator system. It is also known for reported
paranormal activities, supposedly stemming from the salvage of aircraft parts (see below).
The crash

An American Trans Air L-1011-500. Although this shows a later variant, the layout of the crashed aircraft was similar.

This graphic from the
NTSB report shows the airliner's path.
The plane, registered N310EA, was a four-month-old
Lockheed L-1011 and was carrying 163 passengers and 13 crewmembers. Flight 401 left New York's JFK on Friday,
December 29,
1972 at 9:20 pm, en route to Miami International Airport. At the controls were Captain Robert Loft, 55, a veteran
Eastern Air Lines pilot ranked 50th in seniority at Eastern, and first officer Bert Stockstill. The flight engineer was Don Repo.
The flight was routine until 11:32 PM, when the flight began its approach into
Miami International Airport. After lowering the gear, co-pilot Stockstill noticed that the
landing gear indicator, the green light that identifies that the nose gear is properly locked in the 'down' position, did not illuminate. This failure has two possible explanations: either the gear was not down, or the light was not working. Either way, this is considered to be little more than an inconvenience for pilots, as the gear can be lowered manually. The pilots cycled the landing gear but still failed to get the confirmation light.
Loft, who was working the radio during this leg of the flight, told the tower that they would abort their landing and asked for instructions to circle the airport. The tower cleared the flight to pull out of its descent, climb to two thousand feet (610 m), and then fly west over the darkness of the Everglades.
The cockpit crew removed the light assembly and the flight engineer, Don Repo, was dispatched into the avionics bay beneath the flight deck to check visually if the gear was down through a small viewing window. Fifty seconds after reaching their assigned altitude, the captain, Robert Loft, instructed Stockstill to put the L-1011 on autopilot. For the next eighty seconds the plane maintained level flight. Then it dropped one hundred feet (30 m), and then again flew level for two more minutes, after which it began a descent so gradual it could not be perceived by the crew. In the next seventy seconds, the plane lost only 250 feet (76 m), but this was enough to trigger the altitude warning C-chord chime located under the engineer's workstation. The engineer, Don Repo, had gone below, and there was no indication by the pilot's voices recorded on the CVR that they heard the chime. In another fifty seconds, the plane was at half its assigned altitude.
As Stockstill started another turn, onto 180 degrees, he noticed the discrepancy.
| Source | Content |
|---|
| Stockstill | We did something to the altitude |
| Loft | What? |
| Stockstill | We're still at 2000 [feet], right? |
| Loft | Hey — what's happening here? |
The airplane crashed at . The location was west-northwest of Miami, 18.7 miles from the end of runway Nine Left. The plane was traveling at 227 miles per hour when it flew into the ground. The left wingtip hit first, then the left engine and the left landing gear, making three trails through the saw grass, each five feet wide and more than 100 feet long. When the main part of the fuselage hit the ground it continued to move through the grass and water, breaking up as it went.
The cause of the crash
The autopilot had been switched from Command Mode, to CWS (Control Wheel Steering Mode). In the latter, any small inputs to the flight controls will instruct the autopilot how to alter the airplane's course. In this case, small forward pressure on the steering column would force the plane into a descent. Investigators believe the autopilot accidentally switched modes when the captain leaned against the steering column while turning to speak to the flight engineer, who was sitting behind and to the right of him. Like tapping the brakes in a car that is in
cruise control, pressure on the steering column switches the autopilot out of command mode.
The final
NTSB report cited the cause of the crash as
pilot error, specifically: "the failure of the flight crew to monitor the flight instruments during the final four minutes of flight, and to detect an unexpected descent soon enough to prevent impact with the ground. Preoccupation with a malfunction of the nose landing gear position indicating system distracted the crew's attention from the instruments and allowed the descent to go unnoticed." Ninety-four passengers and five crewmembers died in the crash and two more died of injuries during the days following. The series of events leading to the crash of Flight 401 was initiated by two burned-out light bulbs indicating to the flight crew that the landing gear had malfunctioned. The landing gear was found to be in the down and locked position.
''The Ghost of Flight 401''
The story of the crash and its aftermath was documented in
John G. Fuller's book ''
The Ghost of Flight 401'' (ISBN 0-425-06234-1).
Over the following months and years, employees of Eastern Air Lines began reporting sightings of the dead crew members on board another L-1011 (N318EA). The story was that parts of Flight 401 were salvaged after the crash investigation and refitted into the other L-1011. "Sightings" of the spirits of Don Repo and Bob Loft spread throughout Eastern Air Lines to the point where Eastern's management warned employees that they could face dismissal if caught spreading ghost stories. Eastern Air Lines CEO
Frank Borman called it all a bunch of "crap" and considered suing the producers of the 1978 made-for-TV movie ''The Ghost of Flight 401'' for
libel.
The
apparitions of the crew members were allegedly sighted inside a Foster Refrigerator
infrared oven that had been in the galley of Flight 401, and was later salvaged and put into another L-1011. After the supposed ghostly sightings, the oven was sent back to Foster Refrigerator in Hudson, New York.
The crash inspired two made for TV movies. One titled ''Crash'' (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077377/) which dramatized the crash, rescue efforts and NTSB investigation, and another, ''The Ghost of Flight 401'' (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077610/) which was based on the John G. Fuller book.
The aircraft in question was sold to
Cathay Pacific after Eastern Air Lines went bankrupt. It was re-registered in
Hong Kong as VR-HOI and served with Cathay Pacific until 1996 when the airline replaced its Tristar fleet with
Airbus A330-300 aircraft.
See also
★
Lists of accidents and incidents on commercial airliners
★
United Airlines Flight 173
References
★ ''Air Disaster Volume 1'', Macarthur Job, ISBN 1-875671-11-0, p98-101
★ ''Crash'', Rob and Sarah Elder, 1977, Atheneum, New York ISBN 0-689-107587
★ ''From the Captain to the Colonel: An Informal History of Eastern Airlines'', Robert J. Serling, Doubleday 1980, ISBN 0-38527047X
External links
★
NTSB Summary
★
Accident Description
★
Flight 401 Survivors
★
The Black Box Story of Eastern Flight 401
★
CVR transcript
★
The paranormal side to the story