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Adam Air Flight 172

Adam Air Flight 172 was a scheduled domestic passenger flight from Soekarno–Hatta International Airport to Juanda Airport, Surabaya, Indonesia. On 21 February 2007, the Boeing 737-300 operating the flight made a hard landing at Surabaya and suffered cracking of the fuselage in the middle of the passenger section. All six of Adam Air's remaining 737s were immediately grounded, though five of them were back in regular service later that year. This incident caused further concerns regarding the safety of flights operated by Adam Air, which had received much criticism after the crash of Adam Air Flight 574 in 1 January 2007.

Aircraft
The aircraft involved was a Boeing 737-300, registered as PK-KKV, with 37,936 hours of operation and 23,824 takeoffs and landings. The aircraft was manufactured in 1994. ==Accident==
Accident
The plane fractured upon landing at Juanda International Airport, with the fuselage breaking in the middle of the passenger section. The landing was particularly hard, with baggage being ejected from cabin lockers into the cabin space. Adam Air's fleet of Boeing 737-300s was grounded for safety inspections in the interim. In the night after the accident, and before the NTSC had completed its investigation, Adam Air repainted the aircraft, covering the original orange livery with a plain white exterior. The Director of Safety of Adam Air denied that the painting was intended to cover up any evidence, saying that the airline was handling the aircraft in accordance with procedures. claiming that they were worried about the aircraft at the airline. All of these cancellations were refunded in full. ==Grounding of Adam Air's 737s==
Grounding of Adam Air's 737s
As a result of the incident, all six remaining Adam Air 737s were immediately grounded awaiting safety checks. Vice-president of Indonesia Jusuf Kalla said that all Boeing 737-300s should be checked. Also, suggestions were made that Adam Air should be suspended from all operations until the entire fleet could be checked, with MP Abdul Hakim saying, "It will be good for the company and the government ... until the flight authorities can determine if Adam Air is still worthy as a national aircraft company". The Indonesian Transport Ministry said that if the aircraft showed signs of problems, the checks would be expanded to cover all 737s operating in Indonesia. On 5 March, five of the six aircraft were reported to have returned to normal operations, but the sixth was still undergoing a full maintenance overhaul at maintenance, repair, and overhaul firm GMF AeroAsia's facility. Adam Air had resumed its normal schedule by 9 March 2007. ==Investigation==
Investigation
The accident was investigated by the National Transportation Safety Committee (NTSC). Investigators compiled data from the Indonesian weather agency and the air traffic control center in Surabaya in an attempt to determine the cause. In the report, the NTSC noted that the approach was unstable below , with a vertical speed occasionally greater than 2500 ft/min (13 m/s). The vertical acceleration on landing was measured at 5 g. Additionally, the aircraft initially touched down with the right main gear about outside of the runway edge. The investigation further revealed that no technical malfunction occurred on the aircraft before touchdown. The flight crew was criticized for not maintaining a sterile cockpit during the landing, with excessive nonflight-related discussion going on throughout the flight. ==Safety concerns==
Safety concerns
The safety record of Adam Air was heavily criticised, especially in the aftermath of Flight 574. ==Aftermath==
Aftermath
The Indonesian government announced plans immediately after the accident to ban jets over 10 years of age for any commercial purpose. The age limit had been 35 years or 70,000 landings. As of 2016, the Indonesian Ministry of Transport was still discussing the problem of aging aircraft, proposing to ban the import of any commercial passenger aircraft over 10 years old and banning the operation of any aircraft over 30 years old. Indonesia also announced plans to reshuffle the Transportation Ministry in response to this incident, Flight 574 and the loss of the ferries and . Among those to be replaced were the directors of air and sea transports and the chairman of the National Committee for Transportation Safety. Indonesia also intended to introduce a new system of ranking airlines according to their safety record, with a level-one ranking meaning the airline has no serious issues, a level-two ranking meaning the airline must fix problems, and a level-three rating forcing the airline to be shut down. ==See also==
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