On 6 December 1997, the An-124-100 RA-82005 was transporting two Su-27UBK fighters with a total weight of 40 tons en route to Vietnam. At 14:42 IKT aircraft took off from Irkutsk. However, just 3 seconds after lift-off from the runway at a height of, there was a surge in engine number 3 which caused an increase of the angular velocity of the Antonov. This resulted in a shutdown of engine number 2. 8 seconds after takeoff at the altitude of, following surge in engine number 1, the aircraft went into descent. Although the pilots had tried to maintain control over the aircraft with a single remaining functioning engine, the aircraft crashed into apartment blocknumber 45 on Grazhdanskaya Street. The tail section of the Antonov significantly damaged block number 120 and a neighboring orphanage.
Aftermath
The crash resulted in the deaths of all of the crew on board the aircraft as well as 49 people on the ground. More than 70 families were left homeless due the damage dealt on the two blocks by the crashed aircraft. The damages were aggravated due to the ignition of tons of aviation fuel leaked during the crash.
Investigation
A special commission was established to investigate the causes of the disaster. The two flight recorders, including the cockpit voice recorder, were in the center of the fire and were too badly damaged to provide meaningful data. The cause of failure of the three engines at once was officially recognized as the excessive overload of the aircraft. However, temperatures in Irkutsk were below and it was theorized that the disaster was caused by mixing cold-weather fuel with regular fuel, which was present in the tanks of An-124 after previous flight from Vietnam. That mix would have produced ice crystals clogging the fuel filters, which cut the fuel flow to the engines. In an interview with the Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper, the test pilot Alexander Akimenkov said that the accident of RA-82005 in Irkutsk could have been caused by the call of a passenger with the Chinese radiotelephone, which affected the electronics work. Major General Boris Tumanov, former Chief of the Russian Air Force Flight Safety Service and a member of the Commission of Inquiry into Air Accidents with military aircraft, told the Moskovsky Komsomolets that the accident was caused by failure of three engines as a result of the surge. In 2009, Fedor Muravchenko, General Designer of Ivchenko-Progress Design Bureau, gave his own version of the causes of the disaster. Based on the results of this enterprise research and experiments and his own theoretical calculations, he concluded that the disaster situation was caused by high water content in the aviation fuel that resulted in the ice formation and clogging the fuel filters, causing the engines to surge.