CCCP-42362 took off from
Beijing en route to
Moscow on 17 October 1958. It landed at its stopover in
Omsk, Russia before continuing west to its final destination. As it neared
Moscow-Vnukovo Airport, authorization to land was denied by controllers due to heavy fog. The pilots diverted to their alternate,
Gorky Airport, before proceeding to
Sverdlovsk after the weather in
Gorky was also deemed unsuitable for landing. At this point the aircraft was flying at an altitude of 10,000 meters (33,000 ft) when it suddenly flew into an area of high
turbulence causing the aircraft to experience a sudden and drastic increase in
pitch. Caught in a powerful
updraft, the aircraft abruptly reached an altitude of 12,000 meters (39,000 ft). According to one of the pilots per the
cockpit voice recording, the aircraft was "standing on its hind legs", and shortly after it entered a sharp, near vertical dive followed by a
spin. Despite the efforts of the crew, the force on the aircraft's
horizontal stabilizers was too great for the pilots to overcome and an impact with the ground became inevitable. The flight's
pilot-in-command, Harold Kuznetsov, instructed the radio operator to transmit details about the aircraft's situation to ground controllers before shouting "... we're dying! Goodbye!", according to the
black box recordings. At 21:30
MSK, the
Tu-104A crashed near Apnerka rail station, west of the town of
Kanash. ==Conclusions==