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Royal
Air Force Northolt
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Approach
Errors
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A feature by John Davison with additional
credit and thanks to the Daily Mail and Lufthansa.

Disaster
averted – from the days when the Boeing 707 was a “giant jet”
Below
is the scanned image of an article from the Daily Mail of Wednesday 29th
April 1964 relating to the approach and overshoot by Boeing 707-330B D-ABOT
of Lufthansa late in the afternoon of Tuesday 28th April 1964.
Noticing the aircraft heading for Runway 26 at Northolt (as it then was
* ), instead of Runway 23L at Heathrow, air traffic control alerted the
crew to their error and directed the aircraft onwards to Heathrow where
it landed safely. In the closing paragraph reference is made to the Pan-American
Boeing 707 that actually landed in October 1960, its crew having made a
similar navigational error. The large letters “NO” and “LH” were subsequently
painted on the sides of gasholders at Harrow and Southall respectively
to reduce the chances of similar mishaps occurring.
.
TEXT
OF THIS ARTICLE:
Giant jet scare at the
wrong airfield
By Daily Mail Reporter
A
BOEING 707 jet airliner nearly landed at Northolt airfield yesterday in
mistake for London Airport. The 130-ton plane was down to 100ft. when the
pilot realised his error. He increased engine power and lifted the plane
up again.
.
The
blue and yellow Boeing, of Lufthansa, the German airline, circled and landed
safely a few minutes later on its correct runway at London Airport, about
five miles away. The 51 passengers on the flight from Frankfurt said they
noticed nothing unusual. Northolt is an R.A.F. station and has been closed
to civilian traffic since 1954.
.
What
went wrong?
A
Ministry
of Aviation official said last night: “The Boeing pilot was making a visual
approach landing on Runway 23 Left at London, which runs parallel with
Runway 26 at Northolt. “The pilot told the control tower he could see the
runway and he was coming in to land. Control told him to go ahead.
.
Cloud blamed
“Then
the control-tower radar screen showed the Boeing veering off towards Northolt.
“The pilot was informed immediately. But by this time he was down to about
100ft. and about 125-150 m.p.h. above the Northolt runway.” Aviation experts
blame low cloud for the error.
The
German pilot later spoke to officials at London Airport and then returned
to Germany. Runway 26 is only about two-thirds as long as Runway 23 Left
and is not fitted with instrument landing equipment. Three years ago a
Pan American 707 pilot made the same mistake, but he actually landed at
Northolt with his 41 passengers. On that occasion the 707 stopped safely
with only 100 yards of runway to spare.
SCANNED
IMAGE OF THE DAILY MAIL’S ARTICLE© The Daily Mail 29/4/1964
Within
a week, a similar mistake was made by the pilot of a Spanish Air Force
C-54, serialled T.4-10. The Daily Mail reported as follows:
Sorry,
wrong airfield
A Spanish DC-4 airliner
bound for Northolt Airport nearly landed in error yesterday at the privately-owned
Hendon airfield eight miles away.
The
pilot realised his mistake at the last minute and pulled away. A Ministry
of Aviation spokesman said: “The pilot was having frequency trouble. Visibility
was good and he mistook his airport. He veered off and landed at Northolt.”
.
©
The Daily Mail 3/5/1964
Later
in the week of the Boeing incident, the same newspaper raised on its
front page, some fundamental questions about aircraft safety and the
cost-effectiveness of ILS facilities. These questions were raised again
in the wake of the Spanish Learjet crash on 13th August 1996
and are echoed by the debate over train protection equipment in which the
Health and Safety Executive, Railtrack, Strategic Rail Authority, DETR
and others are still engaged as we enter the Twenty-first Century.
TEXT
OF THESE ARTICLES:
Comment
THE
PERIL OF RUNWAY 26
THREE
years ago a giant jetliner landed on runway 26 at Northolt in mistake for
Runway 23 at London Airport (Heathrow). This week only a last-minute correction
prevented it happening again. The question arises: What has been done in
the meantime to prevent such a perilous error? The answer is Nothing –
even though pilots have complained. The danger occurs because Runway 26
is but two-thirds the length of Runway 23. A big jet could over-run it.
The one that landed in 1961 (sic) stopped a mere 100 yards from the end.
Four
out of five runways at Heathrow are fitted with the Instrument Landing
System (I.L.S.), which guides planes down. Runway 23 is without it, because
it is used only when the wind is, infrequently, in the south-west. Pilots
have to make a visual landing.
Solution
But
the wind which dictates the use of Runway 23 edges aircraft towards Runway
26. They are almost identical. They are roughly parallel and only five
miles apart. Both are marked by separate gas-holders. Nothing is easier
than for a pilot to come out of cloud, mistake one gas-holder for the other
and start to make a wrong landing. He will get a radar correction from
control but, as we have seen, an error can still be made. It should be
simple to do one of several things. One gas-holder could be made a different
colour than the other. Large red warning signs could be painted on Runway
26.
The
best solution would be to equip Runway 23 with I.L.S., which would be expensive
and might not be economically justified. But it might save a disaster and
the loss of lives.
©
The Daily Mail 30/4/1964
THIS
ARTICLE APPEARED IN THE DAILY MAIL ALONGSIDE THIS Comment COLUMN (headline
not known):
AIRLINE
pilots are demanding action to close a gap in London Airport landing aids.
The
aim: to avoid a repetition of Tuesday’s carbon-copy near miss by a Boeing
707 pilot. He mistook the R.A.F. airfield at Northolt for London Airport
five miles away and was down to 100ft. before he realised the error. Expert
analysis yesterday showed the mistake was identical with another three
years ago.
In
both cases it could not have happened if London Airport’s Runway 23 was
equipped with a vital aid known to pilots as ILS – Instrument Landing System.
The runway is the only one of five there without ILS.
Economy
It
has not been installed mainly for economy reasons because the runway is
in use only about 12 days in every 100 when a fresh south-west wind is
blowing. The British Airline Pilots’ Association protested to the
Ministry of Aviation in October 1960 after a Pan-American Boeing 707 captain
mistakenly flew into Northolt. Since then the association has continually
pressed the evidence of pilots who have been close to making the same mistake
– like the pilot of the Lufthansa Boeing on Tuesday.
A
Ministry spokesman said last night: “Action has already been taken to install
an ILS on Runway 23. But owing to the legal problems of land acquisition
and wayleaves for the necessary equipment, which must be outside the airport,
this may take some time.”
Pilots
warn that another mistaken landing could be extremely dangerous. The Northolt
Runway 26 is nearly 2,000 feet shorter than Runway 23 and is well below
the internationally fixed minimum for a Boeing 707 landing run. It could
also be obstructed by R.A.F. planes at any time.
Landmark
As
an interim measure most pilots would like to see two prominent landmarks
painted different colours. They are the huge gasholders at Harrow, near
Northolt, and Southall, near London Airport. They stand in almost identical
positions short of the two runways. A pilot said: “It would help if they
had big directional arrows painted on them – ‘Northolt’ and ‘Heathrow’.”
How
does a pilot mistake London Airport’s vast landscape for the comparatively
small green patch of Northolt? For the two Boeing 707 pilots who have done
it the pattern seems to be exactly the same. Both flew into Britain under
similar weather conditions: A gusting south-west wind, cloud at 2000ft.,
intermittent showers, visibility just over five miles.
Both
flew in on a trunk airway under radar guidance from the Southern Region
Control and homed over the Watford beacon where the London Approach Control
takes over.
The
pilots circled over Watford listening in for the voice of the London controller
calling them in. The controller named Runway 23 as the one in use and gave
a compass bearing to bring them down blind through the cloud to find the
runway’s end. If Runway 23 had I.L.S. the pilot would keep his head
down in the cockpit. An instrument on his panel would tell him whether
he was lining up in the right direction and a bleeping noise in his headphones
would indicate marker beacons starting about six miles out.
If
it were dark or the weather bad the pilot would request a Ground Controlled
Approach. But in fine weather he simply breaks through the cloud, looks
around and confirms to the controller when he sees the runway ahead. This
is the point at which the mistakes really began to pile up in both cases.
Like Runway 23, Northolt’s Runway 26 has no I.L.S. so there is no instrument
or bleeping warning in either case. The runways point in roughly the same
direction and both have those eye-catching gasholders about four miles
out. The London runway is used only when a south-west wind is blowing and
one effect of this is to drift an airliner, coming in from Watford, behind
the wrong gasholder.
London
Airport Control keeps all airliners under radar surveillance as they come
in – or it should. Some pilots complain that controllers are so busy they
switch hurriedly to the next plane as soon as the pilot calls: “I have
the runway in sight.” In both Boeing accidents the Ministry of Aviation
claims its controller saw the pilot veer off in the wrong direction and
called a warning. On Tuesday it worked. In October 1960 it appears not
to have done because that 707 landed at Northolt.
Despite
these failures, London Airport is still better than either of New York’s
main airports, which have ILS on only one runway each. Another difficulty
about fitting the extra ILS at London has been the crowding of radio waves
in the area. So many frequencies are in use that to find two needed for
the ILS somebody will have to give way or move over. It might even have
to be the police radio cars.
Lufthansa
said last night: “The pilot concerned in Tuesday’s mishap is making a written
report to his superiors in Hamburg. This report will then be given to London
Airport Control. “We cannot yet say what the pilot’s explanation is. He
flew straight back to Germany.”
Articles
and original graphics © The Daily Mail 30/4/1964
No
doubt similar articles appeared in other national newspapers and specialist
periodicals.
Thirty-three
years later, the AAIB report into the Spanish Learjet crash
concluded, amongst other things, that “the lack of navigation facilities
at Northolt compares unfavourably with other major airfields serving the
London area such as Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted, London City, Luton and
Biggin Hill” [Section 3(a)(xxiii)] and implied that an ILS installation
at Northolt was considered by the Ministry of Defence in the mid-eighties
[paragraph 1.8].
*
FOOTNOTE: in 1964 magnetic north in west London was about 9 degrees west
of grid north and that variation has since reduced, explaining why Runway
26 became redefined as Runway 25. The Ordnance Survey currently estimates
the drift of magnetic north at about 11 minutes eastwards per annum and
there are sixty minutes in a degree. The cross-reference to New York in
the article above presumably related to Runways 04R/22L at John F. Kennedy
and Runways 04/22 at Newark (ie. four approaches with an ILS).
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Thanks go to John Davison for
compiling this report.