Hapag-Lloyd Flight 3378
Flight 3378 after crash-landing short of Vienna Airport. | |
| Accident | |
|---|---|
| Date | 12 July 2000 |
| Summary | Fuel exhaustion due to maintenance error and pilot error |
| Site | Vienna-Schwechat Airport, Vienna, Austria 48°05′00″N 16°35′40″E / 48.08333°N 16.59444°E |
| Aircraft | |
| D-AHLB, the aircraft involved in the accident, in 1998 | |
| Aircraft type | Airbus A310-304 |
| Operator | Hapag-Lloyd Flug |
| IATA flight No. | HF3378 |
| ICAO flight No. | HLF3378 |
| Call sign | HAPAG LLOYD 3378 |
| Registration | D-AHLB |
| Flight origin | Chania International Airport, Chania, Greece |
| Destination | Hannover Airport, Hannover, Germany |
| Occupants | 151 |
| Passengers | 143 |
| Crew | 8 |
| Fatalities | 0 |
| Injuries | 26 (minor) |
| Survivors | 151 |
Hapag-Lloyd Flight 3378 (HF-3378) was a passenger service operated by Hapag-Lloyd Flug from Chania, on the island of Crete, Greece, to Hannover, Germany. On 12 July 2000, the aircraft flying the route, an Airbus A310-304, had 143 passengers and 8 crew on board, set off for Hannover leaving the landing gear fully extended, as a precaution, since a malfunction had prevented its proper retraction after take-off. The plane eventually ran out of fuel while attempting a diversion to Vienna, crash-landing just short of runway 34. No fatalities resulted, although the aircraft was written off.