MarketLufthansa Flight 540
Company Profile

Lufthansa Flight 540

Lufthansa Flight 540 was a scheduled commercial flight for Lufthansa, serving the Frankfurt–Nairobi–Johannesburg route. On 20 November 1974, the Boeing 747-130 that was operating as Flight 540 was carrying 157 people crashed and caught fire shortly after taking off from Embakasi Airport in Nairobi, Kenya, for the last leg of the flight, resulting in the deaths of 54 passengers and 5 crew members. The crash was the first fatal accident involving a Boeing 747, and it remains the deadliest crash in the history of Lufthansa. It also remains the deadliest aviation accident to occur in Kenya.

Aircraft and crew
The aircraft involved was a Boeing 747-130 registered as D-ABYB and was named Hessen. It was the second 747 to be delivered to Lufthansa. It first flew on 30 March 1970 and was delivered to Lufthansa on 13 April. The aircraft was powered by four Pratt & Whitney JT9D-7 turbofan engines. The aircraft had 16,781 flying hours at the time of the accident. In command was 53-year-old Captain Christian Krack (who had logged 10,464 flight hours, with 1,619 hours on the Boeing 747), 35-year-old First Officer Hans-Joachim Schacke (3,418 flight hours, 2,237 of which were logged on the Boeing 747) and 51-year-old Flight Engineer Rudolf "Rudi" Hahn (13,000 hours of flying experience). ==Accident==
Accident
The aircraft departed from runway 24 at the Embakasi Airport in Nairobi. Almost immediately, the pilots felt a buffeting vibration. Unbeknownst to them, the leading-edge slats were left in the retracted position. The captain continued the climb and retracted the landing gear. However, as this was being done, the aircraft started to descend and the stall warning system light came on. The aircraft continued to descend and approximately from the end of the runway, the plane crashed into grass. It then struck an elevated access road and broke up. The left wing exploded and fire spread to the fuselage. 54 of the 139 passengers and 5 of the 18 crew members died. The cockpit remained largely intact, and thus the three pilots survived the accident. ==Cause==
Cause
The cause of the accident was determined to be a stall caused by the leading-edge slats — outboard variable camber leading-edge slats and inboard Krueger flaps — having been left in the retracted position. Even though the trailing edge flaps were deployed, without the slats being extended the aircraft's stall speed was higher and the maximum angle of attack was lower. As a result, the aircraft was unable to climb out of ground effect. The flight engineer was found to have failed to open the slat system bleed air valves as required on the pre-flight checklist. This prevented bleed air from flowing to the 747's pneumatic slat system and, since the leading edge slats on the 747 are pneumatically driven, kept it from deploying the leading edge slats for takeoff. The takeoff warning system, which would have sounded an alarm if the flaps had not been set for takeoff, did not have a separate warning that the slats' pneumatic valve had not been opened by the flight engineer. However, there are reliable indications that Lufthansa was already aware of possible problems with (false) displays concerning the slats a good six months before the Nairobi crash. Other airlines such as British Airways therefore equipped their aircraft with an additional warning system, which Lufthansa did not. ==See also==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com