Status: | Accident investigation report completed and information captured |
Date: | Thursday 22 September 1966 |
Time: | 13:03 |
Type: |  Vickers 832 Viscount |
Operator: | Ansett-ANA |
Registration: | VH-RMI |
MSN: | 416 |
First flight: | 1959 |
Total airframe hrs: | 18634 |
Cycles: | 6586 |
Engines: | 4 Rolls-Royce Dart 525 |
Crew: | Fatalities: 4 / Occupants: 4 |
Passengers: | Fatalities: 20 / Occupants: 20 |
Total: | Fatalities: 24 / Occupants: 24 |
Aircraft damage: | Destroyed |
Aircraft fate: | Written off (damaged beyond repair) |
Location: | 16 km (10 mls) WSW of Winton, QLD ( Australia)
|
Phase: | En route (ENR) |
Nature: | Domestic Scheduled Passenger |
Departure airport: | Mount Isa Airport, QLD (ISA/YBMA), Australia |
Destination airport: | Longreach Airport, QLD (LRE/YLRE), Australia |
Flightnumber: | 149 |
Narrative:Ansett-ANA Flight 149 took off at 12:08 for a 73-minute flight to Longreach. The flight progressed, apparently uneventfully, until 12:52 when the Longreach-Flight Service Unit heard the crew of VH-RMI say that it was on an emergency descent and to stand by. Two minutes later the aircraft advised that there were fire warnings in respect of no. 1 and 2 engines, that one of these warning conditions had ceased and that the propeller of the other engine could not be feathered. At 12:59, information from the crew of VH-RMI, relayed to Longreach through--the crew of another aircraft in the vicinity, indicated that there was a visible fire in no. 2 engine and that the aircraft was diverting below 5000 ft, to Winton.
The Vickers Viscount was descending at an indicated airspeed close to 170 knots between 3500 and 4000 ft above ground level . At this point the port wing failed upwards between engines 1 and 2. It struck the top of the fuselage, which at the same time was cut open by the blades of the no. 1 engine, and fell away from the remainder of the aircraft . The cabin shell above floor level was quickly broken away by air loads until eventually the rear fuselage and empennage also separated from the aircraft. The remaining forward fuselage, with the lower mid fuselage, starboard, wing and, engines and port wing stub with the no. 2 engine still attached, struck the ground at the edge of a clay pan and was immediately engulfed in flames.
Probable Cause:
PROBABLE CAUSE: "The means of securing the oil metering unit to the no.2 cabin blower became ineffective and this led to the initiation of a fire within the blower, which propagated to the wing fuel tank and substantially reduced the strength of the main spar upper boom. It is probable that the separation of the oil metering unit arose from an out-of-balance condition induced by rotor break-up but the source of the rotor break-up could not be determined."
Classification:
Inflight fire
Wing failure
Loss of control
Sources:
» ICAO Aircraft Accident Digest No.16 - Volume II, Circular 82-AN/69 (73-84)
Photos

accident date:
22-09-1966type: Vickers 832 Viscount
registration: VH-RMI
Map
This map shows the airport of departure and the intended destination of the flight. The line between the airports does
not display the exact flight path.
Distance from Mount Isa Airport, QLD to Longreach Airport, QLD as the crow flies is 580 km (362 miles).
Accident location: Approximate; accuracy within a few kilometers.
This information is not presented as the Flight Safety Foundation or the Aviation Safety Network’s opinion as to the cause of the accident. It is preliminary and is based on the facts as they are known at this time.