The military has released the video from a C-17 crash earlier this summer at Elmenndorf AFB in Anchorage. It's not yet on youtube so I'm unable to imbed it, but it can be found at this link.
Looks very similar to the B-52 crash at Fairchild. RIP.
Crew was trying a new maneuver, briefed beforehand and not flat out hot-dogging like the Fairchild B-52 in '94, but not within parameters and aggressive apparently. Put the aircraft into the maneuver, stalled, and there wasn't altitude to recover, unfortunately. Lack of CRM contributory.
Crew was trying a new maneuver, briefed beforehand and not flat out hot-dogging like the Fairchild B-52 in '94, but not within parameters and aggressive apparently. Put the aircraft into the maneuver, stalled, and there wasn't altitude to recover, unfortunately. Lack of CRM contributory.
Not saying your wrong, but word we received from an A/F safety guy was the pilot was trying to do the authorized performance, but wanted to show he could do it faster than the planners said it should be done. Meaning he was trying to show his "superior skills" that he could do it better and faster. In other words, he said the guy was hot-dogging it. Again, just what we where told, not saying it's THE truth.
Freighters are not fighters even if someone tries to fly them as a fighter. And.. release back pressure, roll wings level and PULL.
Freighters are not fighters even if someone tries to fly them as a fighter.
Not a mil guy, but:This is exactly what I was thinking watching the last 3-4 seconds of that clip. Looked to me like they had a decent amount of time to roll back upright, and pull for all they were worth, but then again, I am no C-17 pilot, and who knows if they had already departed and thus had no roll authority at that point. And yeah, I have chatted with a few AF C-17 types, and more than any other heavy person I have ever talked to, they seem to view their aircraft as some sort of hybrid pointy nosed jet. Maybe it is time to throttle back a notch, and fly the thing like the transport it is. Not meaning to come off as harsh, as I'm sure this crew was skilled at what they were doing (and I of course don't have the priviliged details of this mishap), but big picture, I question only the common sense of their leadership that put them up to this.....not the crew in question....there is no reason in the world that an airlift/transport type aircraft should be pushed to the point of departure in peacetime operations.
Not a mil guy, but:
A C17 is not a Caravan or a Cub. It won't perform like that, and I'd suspect (with no swept wing time) that your margin of error in a swept wing airplane doesn't allow you the luxury of "mushing around the corner." To me, that looks eerily like a moose-hunter stall. That sort of stuff is something I'd have no problem doing in a Caravan, 207, 206, Cherokee, or any other small machine. I think that the C17 might be a little too large, and have too much inertia for human reaction times in that sort of maneuver.
What kind of stall recovery performance can someone expect out of a swept wing jet as opposed to a straight wing jet, or a straight wing prop?
Well, I've tried, anyway.![]()
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Also, as I learned in the tanker and later repeated in the 737 when we were having the rudder-hard-overs, you MUST unload the airplane if you expect to roll out. Without that, it is a foregone conclusion if you are low.