My hangar partner saw it...he is on the ground in Savannah...he flew 130's for a career for the USAF...
He says is looked tough to survive...but I hope he is wrong...
folks on the red board are saying it appeared to be a Vmc roll...nose first.....with two engines out.
Two engines out, simultaneously, in a C130. Guessing that would be first.
It was a training flight.....
That could explain a mistake, shutting down the wrong engine etc...
However you would think that any engine failure work at low altitudes would be done in a sim these days. Crash footage is ugly.. does look very much like a Vmc roll.
https://www.firstcoastnews.com/vide...s-military-plane-crash-in-savannah/77-8114897
folks on the red board are saying it appeared to be a Vmc roll...nose first.....with two engines out.
That was unfortunately my first thought: engine failure followed by securing the wrong engine. It’s happened before.That could explain a mistake, shutting down the wrong engine etc...
Depends. Most of the Air Force Instructions require Emergency Procedures to be performed in the simulator, with one caveat. If your base doesn’t have a simulator, you are allowed to perform EPs in the airplane. My unit was one that didn’t have a sim, so we could do simulated engine out training in the plane. There is definitely value added to being able to do both.However you would think that any engine failure work at low altitudes would be done in a sim these days.
What degree did you get? I'm going to try to transfer there from a local college in 2 yearsThat has personal significance in my life as I was rushing my hometown unit with the intention of flying 16s after completing my studies at Georgia Tech.
Russians switched off 3 on An-10, in a publicity stunt (the 10/12 is very much like the 130 in many ways). A few years later, an A-10A lost 3 out of 4 thanks to icing and rolled it in. It's all in pilots being ready or caught flat-footed. If 1 side hits a bunch of geese, I can see losing 2 engines. Happened to Sully, you know. It was a bad deal in Georgia today. R.I.P.Two engines out, simultaneously, in a C130. Guessing that would be first.
What degree did you get? Going to try to transfer there from a local college in 2 years
Russians switched off 3 on An-10, in a publicity stunt (the 10/12 is very much like the 130 in many ways). A few years later, an A-10A lost 3 out of 4 thanks to icing and rolled it in. It's all in pilots being ready or caught flat-footed. If 1 side hits a bunch of geese, I can see losing 2 engines. Happened to Sully, you know. It was a bad deal in Georgia today. R.I.P.
Funny you brought that up. I didn't. Very much coincident with my disillusionment with the loss of the Vipers from my hometown unit, I also became rather disillusioned with the dynamics of getting an undergraduate engineering degree at Georgia Tech. Long story short, I pulled handles outta that place and transferred at the end of my junior year, 3 hours west to the bona fide party school flagship campus called the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. Talk about culture shock for a Rican kid lol; 3 years in Atlanta was really child's play since I grew up in an urban place back home
Interesting to hear, used to hearing people transfer to Tech not transfer out lol. I can see the quality of teaching being more hands on at CC's, the local University I'm going to has a MUCH smaller class size compared to tech's. I didn't mention it before but I want to get my mechanical degree. I'd probably be okay just graduating from the local university, but I like the idea of having Tech's name on my degree, along with their superior funding for research and ideally more experienced/informed professors.Funny you brought that up. I didn't. Very much coincident with my disillusionment with the loss of the Vipers from my hometown unit, I also became rather disillusioned with the dynamics of getting an undergraduate engineering degree at Georgia Tech. Long story short, I pulled handles outta that place and transferred at the end of my junior year, 3 hours west to the bona fide party school flagship campus called the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. Talk about culture shock for a Rican kid lol; 3 years in Atlanta was really child's play since I grew up in an urban place back home.
At any rate, to your question, I didn't change majors either. I merely transferred my credits and finished the degree. Aerospace Engineering in my case. Never used it. Got a master's on the same at Purdue, that one was free on work-study, didn't use it either. Tech is a great research institution, though I don't really consider them honest brokers when it comes to an undergraduate education, in terms of teaching. It's mostly weed-out factories for graduate labor pool. But that doesn't really matter for a local kid, as long as you remain in the South, it holds relatively decent name recognition for vocational traction. For somebody paying in-state tuition, it makes perfect sense. For someone like me paying the de facto "immigration tax" of out-of-state tuition, not so much.
Doing the basics at the cheaper CC is a really good plan. I had several classmates on that track. They did fine and saved a good clip of money. As an educator at the university level for a short time myself, I also dare say the quality of teaching at the CC was much more hands on by the instructor and probably of higher value to an undergraduate student, than the hand me down sink or swim you get at the big name schools by a professor who is gone half the lectures because he's too busy trolling for grant money. Tech was riddled with that dynamic. Don't get me started on the student visa slave labor pseudo extortion racket of their majority foreigner graduate student population. I digress.
Military Times article says the aircraft had undergone routine maintenance just before the flight. I hope some maintainer didn't do something stupid.
https://www.militarytimes.com/news/...crashes-in-georgia-with-5-onboard-guard-says/
Losing two engines in an aircraft of this nature seems unusual at this point in the flight—if that’s what actually occurred. Something else seems at play here, but I could be completely off.