The crash, which occurred early Tuesday afternoon, caused significant damage to the aircraft, the Air Force said in a statement.
That's about the weirdest thing I've ever seen.
They can't say that it was "insignificant" damage. But surely there is a better way of saying “damaged beyond recognition as an artifact of industrial society, much less a fighter jet, and then it also exploded.”"Significant damage" seems to be a very kind statement as I'm not sure the damage will buff out. So glad the pilot survived ...
I'm good with this description. Really hammers it homesurely there is a better way of saying “damaged beyond recognition as an artifact of industrial society, much less a fighter jet, and then it also exploded.”
They can't say that it was "insignificant" damage. But surely there is a better way of saying “damaged beyond recognition as an artifact of industrial society, much less a fighter jet, and then it also exploded.”
Rapid Unplanned Disassembly.They can't say that it was "insignificant" damage. But surely there is a better way of saying “damaged beyond recognition as an artifact of industrial society, much less a fighter jet, and then it also exploded.”
Speculation of course, but I would guess this was during an approach and the pilot initiated a zoom climb to bleed off speed before punching out. So the parachute deploys while the aircraft is still climbing until it stalls out. Wonder if it was going haywire in the cockpit with the controls and the pilot punched out of it.Perhaps it's parallax, but it looks like the jet was falling from significantly above the pilot, after he's already under canopy. Admittedly I have nothing to base this on, but that seems odd to me. And why is the gear down?
Rapid Unplanned Disassembly.
Ron Wanttaja
Fly expensive toys. Break expensive toys. Hopefully not very frequently, but lose an engine, the brain box, or a few critical sensors, and you're punching out. Most of the stuff we fly (from J-3's to A-380's) will at least keep the pointy end forward if something goes awry.Not the first or the last at $80,000,000. each