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Snippets
Snippets
F-15 Landed safely after one of its wings was sheared off in a mid air collision
By
Jon Easley
Unbelievable! But DON'T look at the picture until you read the story below! Read
the article, then look at the picture.
A simulated dogfight training took place between two F-15D's and four A-4N
Skyhawks over the skies of the Negev, Israel. The F-15D #957, (nicknamed 'Markia
Shchakim', 5 kill marks) was used for the conversion of a new pilot in the
squadron. Here is the description of the event as described in "Pressure suit":
"At some point I collided with one of the Skyhawks, at first I didn't realize
it. I felt a big strike, and I thought we passed through the jet stream of one
of the other aircraft. Before I could react, I saw the big fire ball created by
the explosion of the Skyhawk.
The radio started to deliver calls saying that the Skyhawk pilot has ejected,
and I understood that the fireball was the Skyhawk, that exploded, and the pilot
was ejected automatically.
There was a tremendous fuel stream going out of my wing, and I understood it was
badly damaged. The aircraft flew without control in a strange spiral. I
reconnected the electric control to the control surfaces, and slowly gained
control of the aircraft until I was straight and level again. It was clear to me
that I had to eject. When I gained control I said : "Hey, wait, don't eject
yet!" No warning light was on and the navigation computer worked as usual; (I
just needed a warning light in my panel to indicate that I missed a wing...)."
My instructor pilot ordered me to eject.
The wing is a fuel tank, and the fuel indicator showed 0.000 so I assumed that
the jet stream sucked all the fuel out of the other tanks. However, I remembered
that the valves operate only in one direction, so that I might have enough fuel
to get to the nearest airfield and land. I worked like a machine, wasn't scared
and didn't worry. All I knew was as long as the sucker flies, I'm gonna stay
inside. I started to decrease the airspeed, but at that point one wing was not
enough. So I went into a spin down and to the right. A second before I decided
to eject, I pushed the throttle and lit the afterburner. I gained speed and thus
got control of the aircraft again.
Next thing I did was lower the arresting hook. A few seconds later I touched the
runway at 260 knots, about twice the recommended speed, and called the tower to
erect the emergency recovery net. The hook was torn away from the fuselage
because of the high speed, but I managed to stop 10 meters before the net. I
turned back to shake the hand of my instructor, who had urged me to eject, and
then I saw it for the first time - no wing !!!
The IAF (Israeli Air Force) contacted McDonnell Douglas and asked for
information about possibility to land an F-15 with one wing. MD replied that
this is aerodynamically impossible, as confirmed by computer simulations... Then
they received the photo.... After two months the same F-15 got a new wing and
returned to action. Special thanks to Tsahi Ben Ami.
This is what "Flight international" wrote about the incident: "The most
outstanding Eagle save was by a pilot from a foreign Air Force".
During air combat training his two-seater F-15 was involved in a mid air
collision with an A-4 Skyhawk.
The A-4 crashed, and the Eagle lost its right wing from about 2 ft. outboard.
After some confusion between the instructor who said eject, and the student who
outranked his instructor and said no, the F-15 was landed at it's desert base.
Touching down at 290 knots, the hook was dropped for an approach end engagement.
This slowed the F-15 to 100 knots, when the hook weak link sheared, and the
aircraft was then braked conventionally.
It is said that the student was later demoted for disobeying his instructor,
then promoted for saving the aircraft.
McDonnell Douglas attributes the saving of this aircraft to the amount of lift
generated by the engine intake/body and "a hell of a good pilot".
Some notes: This mid air happened on 1st May 1983 during
simulated dogfight training took place between two F-15D's and four A-4N
Skyhawks over the skies of the Negev.
A comment at the web site
http://www.f-16.net/varia_article8.html says, "When I was stationed at
McCord AFB, there was a collision between an F-15 and an F-16 up in Alaska
during an exercise in 1989-1990. Both planes made it back to base each with a
loss of a wing to the wing root plus stabilizer damage... I can't seem to find
any photos online, perhaps others can? Please email me at mlorrey at yahoo dot
com if you do find these photos... thx."
http://www.uss-bennington.org/phz-nowing-f15.html

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