At 15:30
GMT on 29 November, the group departed from Le Castellet and flew to
Marseille-Marignane Airport. Hill visited the self-briefing room and obtained weather reports for the London area. An
IFR flight plan was filed for a flight to
Elstree Airfield, with
Luton Airport as alternate. The Piper Aztec took off from Marseille at 17:47. Contact was made with
London Air Traffic Control Centre at 20:45 and a weather report for Elstree was obtained, giving a visibility of 2,000 metres and a cloud base of 300 ft
AGL. At 21:19, the aircraft was passed to London Heathrow Approach and Hill was informed that visibility at Elstree was 1,000 metres. At 21:21, having descended to passing south of
Lambourne VOR, Hill was informed that visibility at Elstree had decreased to 800 metres. The aircraft was subsequently cleared to descend to , below which any further descent was at the pilot's discretion. At 21:28, the London Approach controller contacted N6645Y to pass further information; there was no reply. Shortly afterwards, radar contact was lost. The Aztec, with its
landing gear and
flaps already extended, brushed the top of a large tree at an elevation of
AMSL within Arkley Golf Course, to the east and above Elstree airfield. It then descended further, colliding with more trees, rolling to the right, striking the ground with its wing tip and finally crashing into a copse. An intense fire developed after the impact, which destroyed most of the aircraft. All six occupants were instantly killed. Elstree's runway was equipped with
edge lights and a low-intensity
visual slope indicator, but lacked any radio aid and there were no published
instrument approach procedures for the airfield, making it unsuitable for low-visibility operations. Witnesses near the crash site reported that weather conditions at the time were thick fog, with a visibility of 50 to 100 metres. Around three hours earlier, a pilot of another light aircraft had attempted three approaches into Elstree, assisted with radar headings and distances to the airfield provided by London Approach. On all three attempts, descending to as low as AGL, the airfield lights either remained not visible or were spotted too late to proceed with the landing. The pilot eventually diverted to another airport. Visibility above the cloud layer at AMSL, was reported as very good. == Aircraft ==