• On May 23, 1960, Delta Air Lines Flight 1903, a CV-880-22-1 (N8804E), crashed on takeoff at Atlanta Municipal Airport (now
Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport), resulting in the loss of all four crew members. This flight was to be a training sortie for two Delta captains who were being type-rated on the 880. At rotation, the aircraft pitched nose up, rolled left, and then back more steeply to the right, at which time it struck the ground, broke apart, and was consumed by a fire. • On August 26, 1966, a Japan Air Lines CV-880-22M-3 (JA8030)
crashed on takeoff from
Haneda Airport during a training flight, killing all five crew members. When the nose lifted up, the aircraft yawed to the left, for reasons unknown. The number one engine struck the runway and the aircraft left the runway and the nose went back down. All four engines separated, as well as the nose and left main gear, and the aircraft caught fire. The aircraft was leased from Japan Domestic Airlines. • On November 5, 1967, Cathay Pacific Flight 033, a CV-880-22M-3 (VR-HFX) overran the runway on takeoff from
Kai Tak Airport following a loss of control after the right nosewheel blew, killing 1 of 127 on board. • On November 20, 1967,
TWA Flight 128 crashed on approach to
Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport. Seventy people were killed and twelve people survived. • On June 24, 1969,
Japan Air Lines Flight 90, a CV-880-22M-3 (JA8028,
Kikyo), crashed on takeoff from
Grant County Airport,
Washington, killing three of the five crew members. The flight was to simulate a takeoff with one engine out. Power was reduced to the number four engine during takeoff, but the aircraft continued to yaw to the right until the number four engine struck the runway. The aircraft slid off the runway and caught fire. • On June 15, 1972, a bomb exploded on board
Cathay Pacific Flight 700Z over Pleiku, South Vietnam, killing all 81 passengers and crew on board. • On December 20, 1972, North Central Airlines Flight 575, a
McDonnell Douglas DC-9-31,
collided during its takeoff roll with Delta Air Lines Flight 954, a Convair 880 (N8807E), as the Convair 880 taxied across the runway at
O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, Illinois. Only two people on the Convair 880 were injured, but 10 people died and 15 were injured on board the DC-9. • On August 20, 1977, a Monarch Aviation CV-880-22-2 (N8817E) struck trees and crashed shortly after takeoff from
Juan Santamaria International Airport,
Costa Rica, due to overloading, killing the three crew. • On November 3, 1980, a Latin Carga CV-880-22-2 (YV-145C)
crashed on takeoff from
Simon Bolivar International Airport,
Caracas,
Venezuela, during a crew training flight, killing the four crew. • On May 11, 1983, a Groth Air CV-880-22-2 (N880SR) burned out at
Juarez International Airport,
Mexico City. • In October 1986, an
FAA CV-880-22M-3 (N5863) was intentionally destroyed in a test with
anti-misting kerosene fuel additive at Mojave, California. ==Surviving aircraft==