The invisible ice that downed Flight 1363
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In one case, a passenger aircraft attempts departure in cold weather conditions while dealing with limited ground support and mechanical constraints. Ice contamination on the wings significantly reduces lift, but operational pressures and inadequate de-icing procedures contribute to the decision to proceed. Shortly after takeoff, the aircraft is unable to gain altitude and crashes, exposing critical weaknesses in safety protocols and decision-making under pressure.
In another incident, a similar aircraft again faces winter conditions where wing contamination goes insufficiently addressed. Despite earlier warnings in the industry about the dangers of ice accumulation, communication gaps and procedural inconsistencies prevent effective corrective action. The aircraft fails to achieve proper lift during takeoff and suffers a fatal crash.
Investigations into both events reveal that while pilots were operating under challenging conditions, the deeper causes lay in systemic issues—insufficient de-icing infrastructure, operational pressure from organizations, and gaps in safety communication between regulatory bodies.
These tragedies ultimately lead to significant reforms in cold-weather aviation operations, including improved de-icing fluids, stricter pre-takeoff inspection procedures, and enhanced coordination between ground crews and flight operations.
You can listen and download our episodes for free on more than 10 different platforms:
https://linktr.ee/Air_Crash_Chronicles
Produced by Podcai Studio:
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