Bad week for the Eglin
https://www.airforcetimes.com/news/...ble-condition-2nd-crash-at-base-in-four-days/
https://www.airforcetimes.com/news/...ble-condition-2nd-crash-at-base-in-four-days/
Wonder who the wing commander used to be?
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zo...ed-to-kill-its-pilot-prior-to-eglin-afb-crash
Very interesting results and analysis of the crash.
Abandon all technology, ye who enter here.Automation and integrated systems are great when they work.
On the other hand...
I’m wondering why just looking out the window wouldn’t have told the pilot that he wasn’t flared adequately.
Was that crash at nighttime? It mentions a poorly lit airport, but I saw no mention of nighttime.
The second article states $175 million loss which is a number closer to what I have read. Almost makes going to war too expensive.
And what "human factors" idiot thought oxygen on demand, read that "resistance to inhalation" was a good idea? Fire that person. This is a well-known issue in underwater diving--SCUBA and rebreathers.
Somewhere, there is an accountant writing up a report that the more early production F-35's we lose, the more money we save because the new production planes cost less to acquire.The earlier production airplanes, which this one was, were more expensive then the new ones coming off the line today.
...That has been standard on regulators for a long time - you can kick it into pressure breathing if necessary but I don't think the pilots are required to do this except in certain instances. Maybe one of our mil flyers can speak to their SOPs.
The legacy O2 regulator panel SOP is Normal/Normal/On. In the mask, not much effort is needed to breath in that configuration. Rapid Depressuration is to gangload to Emer/100%/On which results in positive rate 100% O2 being fed to the mask and requires a forceful exhale against the pressure. That setting isn’t designed to be used for extended periods.
The F-35, like a lot of other modern fighters uses OBOGS instead of LOX, which can create it’s own set of problems in O2 delivery. Here’s a decent paper on some of those.
https://www.airuniversity.af.edu/Portals/10/ASPJ/journals/Volume-33_Issue-3/F-Elliott_Schmitt.pdf
What I don’t know is whether the F-35 uses the legacy regulator which may not be the source of the increased work of breathing that OBOGS can result in, or if it uses an electronic regulator. @hindsight2020 or one of our other current mil aviators will have better info though.
The paper I linked goes into a good discussion on the systems as well as Physiological Events in tactical aircraft with OBOGS.... I was more trying to say that I don't think the regulator/on demand oxygen is the issue as the other poster was implying - it is something else in the OBOGS.
What I don’t know is whether the F-35 uses the legacy regulator which may not be the source of the increased work of breathing that OBOGS can result in, or if it uses an electronic regulator. @hindsight2020 or one of our other current mil aviators will have better info though.
I ...
None of this has anything to do with what happened with this F-35 in my professional opinion.
^ yeah I agree with this being irrelevant to the topic at hand.