Tag Archives: N753SW

NTSB blames the Southwest Airlines captain for his “failure to comply with standard operating procedures” for the July 22, 2013 hard landing at New York’s LaGuardia Airport

National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) (Washington) has issued this statement and report on the July 22, 2013 hard landing of a Southwest Airlines Boeing 737-7H4 (N753SW) at New York’s LaGuardia Airport:

NTSB logo

The National Transportation Safety Board determined that the captainโ€™s failed attempt to recover from an unstabilized approach by transferring airplane control at low altitude instead of performing a go-around, caused a hard landing at LaGuardia International Airport (LGA) in Queens, New York.

On July 22, 2013, a Boeing 737, operated as Southwest Airlines flight 345, landed hard, nose-first, on runway 4 at LGA. Of the 144 passengers and five crewmembers on board, eight sustained minor injuries and the airplane was substantially damaged.

Contributing to the accident was the captainโ€™s failure to comply with standard operating procedures during the approach. NTSB found that the first officer was conducting the approach, and the captain took control away from the first officer, but not until the plane was 27 feet above the ground. This late transfer of control from the first officer to the captain resulted in neither pilot being able to effectively monitor the airplaneโ€™s altitude and pitch attitude. According to the Southwest Airlines Flight Operations Manual, the captain should have called for a go-around well before this point in the approach instead of trying to salvage the landing.

For example, Southwestโ€™s stabilized approach criteria require an immediate go-around if the airplane flaps are not in the final landing configuration by 1,000 feet above the ground. In this case, the flaps were not correctly set until the airplane was 500 feet above the ground.

Read the full report: CLICK HERE

Southwest Airlines’ N753SW nose wheel collapses on landing at LaGuardia causing major delays

Southwest Airlines’ (Dallas) flight WN 345 from Nashville to New York (LaGuardia) operated with Boeing 737-7H4 N753SW (msn 29848) skidded off the runway last night (July 22) on landing at LGA ending up in the grass. After touchdown the nose wheel collapsed on landing, pressing back into the fuselage. Three passengers and five crew members were transported to a local hospital due to back and neck pain. The incident closed the airport and caused severe delays.

Southwest Airlines issued this statement:

Southwest Airlines flight 345 landed at New Yorkโ€™s LaGuardia at 5:40 PM Eastern Monday evening from Nashville. There were 150 people on board including Customers and Crew. Three Customers and five Crew Members were transported to local hospitalsโ€”all have been treated and released.

The aircraft, a Boeing 737-700, was last inspected July 18, 2013. The aircraft entered service in October 1999. Southwest is working with both the NTSB and Boeing in a preliminary investigation of this event.

Overnight, the aircraft was removed from the runway. Southwest has resumed full operations at LaGuardia.

We express our utmost gratitude to emergency responders and Southwest Employees who assisted us last night.

In other news, Southwest announced it willย introduce new service between Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport and Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, beginning on February 13, 2014.

The new route is the next step in the integration process between Southwest Airlines and its wholly owned subsidiary,ย AirTran Airways.ย Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internationalย is AirTran’s top airport in terms of daily departures, andย Reagan Nationalย ranks eighth. In addition to the once-daily Southwest flight betweenย Atlantaย and Washington, D.C., AirTran will continue to operate five daily nonstop flights between the cities.

Southwest is also introducing a new nonstop flight between Baltimore/WashingtonInternational Airportย andย Dayton International Airport on February 13. Seasonal service between Reno/Tahoe and Chicago (Midway), Las Vegas and Albany, and Long Island MacArthur and Ft. Myers will resume on February 13, 2014.

Top Video: This video shows the aircraft landing.