TWA Flight 513
TWA Flight 513, registration NC86513, Star of Lisbon, was a Lockheed L-049 Constellation operated by Transcontinental and Western Air on a training flight on July 11, 1946, near Reading, Pennsylvania.
Description
The electrical wiring in the baggage compartment of TWA Flight 513 on July 11, 1946 arced, starting a fire while the aircraft was in the air. The smoke and intense fire that were created made it impossible for the pilots to maintain control of the aircraft.
Of the six crewmembers aboard, five were killed.
This accident was memorable for the subsequent grounding of all Lockheed Constellations that was required from July 12 until August 23, 1946, when cargo fire detection equipment could be installed on all similar airplane models.
See also
- United Airlines Flight 624
References
- ^ "NC86513 accident description". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 16 August 2013.
External links
- Report of the Civil Aeronautics Board (Archive)
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- TWA Flight 513 (1946)
- TWA Flight 6963 (1946)
- Pan Am Flight 121 (1947)
- Pan Am Flight 1-10 (1948)
- Air France Flight 009 (1949)
- TWA Flight 903 (1950)
- Air India Flight 245 (1950)
- Pan Am Flight 151 (1951)
- Air France Flight 152 (1953)
- Air France Flight 178 (1953)
- KLM Flight 633 (1954)
- Air India Flight 300 (1955)
- El Al Flight 402 (1955)
- LAV Flight 253 (June 1956)
- TWA Flight 2 (1956)
- LAV Flight 253 (November 1956)
- KLM Flight 844 (1957)
- KLM Flight 607-E (1958)
- Lufthansa Flight 502 (1959)
- TWA Flight 891 (1959)
- Avianca Flight 671 (1960)
- Air France Flight 343 (1960)
- TWA Flight 266 (1960)
- Air France Flight 406 (1961)
- TWA Flight 529 (1961)
- IA Flight 201/8 (1961)
- FTL Flight 739 (1962)
- Paradise Airlines Flight 901A (1964)
- EAL Flight 853 (1965)
- LANSA Flight 501 (1966)
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