Southern Airways Express flight 246 took off from Washington Dulles airport this afternoon at around 12:45 p.m. from runway 30. Two minutes later the Cessna 208B Grand Caravan landed on the Loudoun County Parkway. Two pilots and five passengers were on board, and all are reported safe. Dulles airport remains open.
Statement at 1:30pm: Dulles Airport received reports around 12:50pm of a departed aircraft landing off airport property on a nearby roadway. The aircraft was identified as Southern Airways Express flight 246. Responders from Loudoun County are managing the scene, and Dulles…
— Dulles Airport (IAD) (@Dulles_Airport) January 19, 2024
#BREAKING | Southern Airways Express flight 9X246, a Cessna 208B Grand Caravan, force landed on #Loudoun County Parkway roadway, two minutes after #takeoff from runway 30 at Washington-Dulles International Airport, DC (IAD).#Washington #Dulles #airport #Landing #Flight… pic.twitter.com/WlhlFrmMwO
— mishikasingh (@mishika_singh) January 19, 2024
Picture from a News4 viewer showing the plane that made an emergency landing on the Loudoun County parkway, not far from the tip of one of Dulles’ runways. No reports of major injuries. @nbcwashington pic.twitter.com/TBFTz6jsyP
— Tom Lynch (@TomLynch_) January 19, 2024
Here’s a replay of the trip:
Southern Airways Express C208B Grand Caravan made an Emergency Landing on the highway shortly after take off from Washington Dulles at roughly 17:48 UTC today. Flight was enroute to Lancaster.
A winter storm is currently passing through the Washington Area.#N1983X – #9X246 https://t.co/YEUeOOPrNu pic.twitter.com/2hJ6g34wHq
— Clark Kent (@ClarkKe49569692) January 19, 2024
The 20 year old turboprop, registration N1983X, climbed to around 850 feet before coming down on the parkway. No major injuries were reported. The aircraft stopped on the side of the road and passengers and crew evacuated. It appears that the plane’s propeller blades are bent. No word yet on the cause.
Great piloting and glad all are safe!
Excellent safety move .
Bent propeller blades? I think bird.
Loudoun not Louden.
Will the passengers on Southern Airways Express flight 246 earn bonus frequent flyer miles after their flight departs from Washington Dulles Airport (IAD) and makes an unscheduled emergency landing on the Loudoun County Parkway near Arcola Mills Drive?
I once got American to give me the extra segment (and they tossed out 12,000 bonus miles) for a return to airport and emergency landing on one engine (MD-80 into STL). I was on an end of year segment run and kinda needed it for status.
Prop blades bent looks like it struck the guardrail and would look like the prop was moving at time of impact. A birdstrike wouldn’t bend them all, unless it was a lot of birds and in that case the volume/size of birds to do that would put a few holes in the plane too.
Looks like the pilots put it down in as good a spot as possible there. Single engine, especially if power is an issue, making a 180 back to an airport at low altitude does not usually end well because you lose a lot of speed and altitude (change in lift) in such a turn. Somewhere in the field of vision direct/to the side is what is trained. I’d be curious if they were in their initial turn to heading… usually Southern (radio callsign Friendly) is given a quick turn to get out of the way on departure.
Not the first plane with an airline named Southern to try to land on a road. This one turned out a lot better.
Also bring back memories of the kind of flying weather Air Florida 90 encountered. That one had a de-icing mistake and then the mistake of the pilots’ handling of getting out the stall while taking off. Didn’t have to end that way.
Miraculous they were able to dicth on Loudon County Parkway without contacting any vehicles. That is a busy road. Kudos to pilot.
Wonder if they’ll find the engine anti-ice inertial separator in the “off” position. Glad everyone walked away.
Commercial with a single, one (1) engine.
Where’s the ALPA and GSW safety nannies? Have they weighed in yet?
Bent Prop ?
https://airplaneacademy.com/why-are-some-propeller-blades-curved-scimitar-shaped/