Emergency landing after bird strike, B734, Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, 6 June 2010

Emergency landing after bird strike, B734, Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, 6 June 2010

Publication info
Author
Dutch Safety Board
Category
Accident Reports Wildlife Strike Controlled Flight Into Terrain Loss of Control Human Factors

On 6 June 2010, a Boeing 737-400 being operated by Atlas Blue, a wholly owned subsidiary of Royal Air Maroc, on a passenger flight from Amsterdam to Nador, Morocco encountered a flock of geese just after becoming airborne from runway 18L in day VMC close to sunset and lost most of the thrust on the left engine following bird ingestion. A MAYDAY was declared and a minimal single engine climb out was followed by very low level visual manoeuvring not consistently in accordance with ATC radar headings before the aircraft landed back on runway 18R just over 9 minutes later. The aircraft was stopped on the runway where inspection found the right main gear tyres deflated as a result of the high brake unit temperature developed during heavy braking and extensive bird remains in the left main and nose gear bays and in the avionics bay. None of the 162 occupants were injured and the passengers were disembarked using steps brought to the aircraft before being bussed to the terminal.

SKYbrary Partners:

Safety knowledge contributed by: