Date: April 4, 1977 Type: DC-9-31 Registration: N1335U Operator: Southern Airways, Inc. Where: New Hope, Georgia Report No. NTSB-AAR-78-3 Report Date: January 26, 1978 Pages: 106 At 1619 e.s.t. April 4, 1977, a Southern Airways, Inc., DC-9, Flight 242, crashed in New Hope, Georgia. After losing both engines in flight, it attempted an emergency landing on a highway. Of the 85 persons aboard Flight 242, 62 were killed, 22 were seriously injured, and 1 was slightly injured. Eight persons on the ground were killed and one person was seriously injured; one person died about 1 month later. Flight 42 entered a severe thunderstorm between 17,000 feet and 14,000 feet near Rome, Georgia, en route from Huntsville to Atlanta. Both engines were damaged and all thrust was lost. The engines could not be restarted and the flightcrew was forced to make an emergency landing. The National Transportation Safety Board determines that the probable cause of this accident was the total and unique loss of thrust from both engines while the aircraft was penetrating an area of severe thunderstorms. The loss of thrust was caused by the ingestion of massive amounts of water and hail which in combination with thrust lever movement induced severe stalling in and major damage to the engine compressors. Major contributing factors included the failure of the company's dispatching system to provide the flightcrew with up-to-date severe weather information pertaining to the aircraft's intended route of flight, the captain's reliance on airborne weather radar for penetration of thunderstorm areas, and limitations in the Federal Aviation Administration's air traffic control system which precluded the timely dissemination of real-time hazardous weather information to the flightcrew.