I-DALO Savioa-Marchetti SM.95C
(c/n
unknown).
Alitalia were in the habit of sending me three-quarter
(usually cropped) head-on shots of their aircraft.
By enlarging the
nose portion of the original print (see below) the name "Ugolino Vivaldi" (a 13th
century
Genovese explorer) was clearly visible. This made the aircraft
I-DALO. This was the last
SM.95 to be received by
Alitalia. It came to grief on 17 January 1951, and the following
is an extract
from the accident
report:
I-DALO departed
Paris at 10:16 for a flight to Rome. At 14:36 the crew reported its
position
as over the Civitavecchia beacon
at 6500 feet. A few minutes later, the aircraft was then seen
descending in flames rapidly. The aircraft banked to the left
heavily and crashed. 14 of the 17
souls on board were killed.
Coincidentally, the same aircraft on the same route with the same pilot
on board had experienced a similar incident on 17 May 1949 near Lyon
and had made a successful
emergency landing at Lyon Airport with two meters of its right wing tip
section missing. The prob-
able cause
of the 1951 accident was given as a lightning strike on the wing which
ignited a mixture
of air and gasoline fumes in one
of the wing panels.