Planecrashinfo -
Ron R. has created something rare on the modern internet: a . It is a reminder that the web was once a place where one person’s obsession could become the world’s reference library.
Disclaimer: As of 2025, the site remains online but is not actively maintained for new accidents post-2020. Check Aviation Safety Network for the most recent events. planecrashinfo
And that is precisely why it works. The lack of polish conveys a strange authority. It feels like a dossier, not a blog. There are no ads for flight schools or credit cards. There is no algorithm suggesting "more crashes you might like." It is a library. You enter, you find your flight, you read, you leave—disturbed but informed. Disclaimer: As of 2025, the site remains online
So the next time you find yourself on that beige page, reading the final words of a cockpit voice recorder, remember: you are standing in someone’s life’s work. It is grim. It is flawed. And it is absolutely essential. The lack of polish conveys a strange authority
Let’s be honest: the site is ugly. Beige background. Black text. Blue, un-visited links. No CSS. No mobile responsiveness. In an era of parallax scrolling and glassmorphism, PlaneCrashInfo looks like a Geocities relic.