1983 in aviation

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Template:Short description Template:Yearbox Template:Portal This is a list of aviation-related events from 1983.

Events

January

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  • January 16 – The Turkish Airlines Boeing 727-2F2 Afyon, operating as Flight 158, lands short of the runway in driving snow at Esenboğa International Airport in Ankara, Turkey. The plane breaks up and catches fire, killing 47 of the 67 people on board.
  • January 18 – The Iraqi Air Force conducts a major raid against civilian and economic targets in Iran, claiming to have dispatched 66 sorties but actually sending more. The raid is made with inadequate fighter escort for attack aircraft and poor crew training in evading Iranian ground antiaircraft defenses, and some aircraft are lost due to insufficient maintenance or because they have been sent to targets that are too far away, causing them to run out of fuel on the way home.<ref name="cord158">Cordesman and Wagner, p. 158.</ref>
  • January 20 – Out on probation for hijacking Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 608 at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport outside Seattle, Washington, in July 1980, 20-year-old Glenn Kurt Tripp again hijacks Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 608, a Boeing 727 with 41 people on board bound for Portland, Oregon. After it takes off from Seattle, he tells a flight attendant that he has bomb in a box he is holding and demands to be flown to Afghanistan, but agrees to allow the airliner to land at Portland to refuel. After three hours of negotiations at Portland, Tripp agrees to allow half the passengers to disembark and while they do, two U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation agents climb aboard the plane through its cockpit windows and confront Tripp. When Tripp moves as if to throw his box at them, one agent fires a single shot that kills him. The box turns out to contain no explosives.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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February

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March

April

May

June

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July

August

September

October

  • October 2 – During an Iranian offensive, Iraq apparently experiments with the use of Mil Mi-8 (NATO reporting name "Hip") helicopters and Soviet-made attack aircraft to drop mustard gas.<ref name="cord175">Cordesman, Anthony H., and Abraham R. Wagner, The Lessons of Modern War, Volume II: The Iran-Iraq War, Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1990, Template:ISBN, p. 175.</ref>
  • October 9 – Iraq confirms that it has taken delivery from France of five Dassault-Breguet Super Étendard strike fighters.<ref name="cord173"/>
  • October 11; A Lufthansa Boeing 747 plane carrying cargo crash lands at Hong Kong Kai take airport. The plane ends up on the grass and is seriously damaged. There are no deaths.

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November

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December

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First flights

January

  • January 14 – Gulfstream Peregrine<ref name="jaa83 p24">Taylor 1983, p. 24.</ref>
  • January 25 – Saab 340<ref name="jaa83 p88">Taylor 1983, p. 88</ref> SE-ISF

April

  • April 21 – Mooney 301<ref name="jaa83 p91">Taylor 1983, p. 91.</ref>
  • April 25 – Dornier Do 24TT<ref name="jaa83 p92">Taylor 1983, p. 92.</ref> D-CATD

June

July

August

September

October

  • October 6 – Bell OH-58D Kiowa (Bell Model 406)<ref>David, Donald, ed., The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft, New York: Barnes & Nobles Books, 1997, Template:ISBN, p. 112.</ref>

November

  • November 11 – CASA CN-235<ref name="jaa84 p87">Taylor 1984, p. 87.</ref>

Entered service

January

March

April

May

November

Retirements

Deadliest crash

The deadliest crash of this year was Korean Air Lines Flight 007, a Boeing 747 which was shot down over the Sea of Japan near Sakhalin Island, Russian SFSR on 1 September, killing all 269 people on board.

References

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  • Taylor, Michael J.H. Jane's 1983–84 Aviation Review. London: Jane's Publishing Company, 1983. Template:ISBN.
  • Taylor, Michael J.H. Jane's Aviation Review. Fourth edition. London: Jane's Publishing Company, 1984. Template:ISBN.

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