OD-ACZ
Avro 685 York C.1
(c/n 1218)
In 1957 Middle East Airlines acquired several
(three, I think) Avro Yorks for freight duties.
This one
had been around the block. It was built as RAF York C.1 TS793 and
was civilianized
in 1946
for BOAC as G-AGNP. It was seconded to South African Airways for
a while as
ZS-BRA and was
then back in service as WW509 (Berlin Airlift?). Civilianized
again, it was
sold to
Air Liban as OD-ABT. After a refurbishing (again as G-AGNP) it
went to MEAC.
On 15 March 1963 OD-ACZ was carrying out a freight flight from Beirut to Tehran via Kuwait.
On the
Kuwait-Tehran leg of the flight several test maneuvers were carried out
by a check pilot
who was
examining the pilot in command and co-pilot for renewal of their
licenses. On leaving
Tehran at
05:30 GMT, the crew did not report when 25 miles out as requested, and
it appeared
that the
aircraft had crashed 16 miles W of the airport.
Investigation indicated that the no. 4
engine
had been powered down at the time and that, whilst in this condition,
the no.3 engine
developed
problems. In view of the fact that the fully loaded
aircraft was flying at a low altitude
after taking
off from Mehrabad Airport which has an elevation of 3900 feet, it is
evident that at
the
aircraft would not have had sufficient altitude for the pilot to take
effective recovery action and
so avoid a
crash resulting from the above mentioned loss-of-power
conditions. On the image
below I
cannot positively ascertain the identity of this machine so I will
append it to OD-ACZ.
It does,
however, illustrate the "Cedars of Lebanon" nose treatment quite
clearly.