
Originally Posted by
ABNAK
Okay, I'm not an aviation expert or anything but given where he punched out at, and the direction he was headed, they can't estimate where it went down? WTF?
So being in an MOS where we reviewed a lot of incident reports straight COMNAVAIRFOR (Navy Aviation command) it depends a lot of the failure and on the conditions of the flight at the time (Speed, direction, pitch, yaw, as well as weather conditions). A Marine pilot who knew that the plane was unsafe directly after take off tried to aim the jet to the ocean, and thought he allowed enough time for him to eject on land but the plane to glide into the ocean ejected just for the plane to then nose dive into a house in La Jolla California (08) killing a grandparents and a 1 year old they were watching. There was another Harrier crash in 2010 where the pilot ejected and the plane flew for about 12 more miles before finally crashing in some swamp land in Florida. Having been on the USS Boxer (13th MEU) and watch a Harrier go into the water (March 29, 2011) you would think that the Harrier wouldn't have been able to maintain a glide for that long where a F18 would, but certain times it's just what was going on when the pilot ejected.
Dr. Carter G. Woodson, “History shows that it does not matter who is in power or what revolutionary forces take over the government, those who have not learned to do for themselves and have to depend solely on others never obtain any more rights or privileges in the end than they had in the beginning.”
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