View Full Version : Turkish F-16 fighter crashes near Syria, killing pilot
shot down?
The pilot of a Turkish F-16 fighter jet has been found dead after the aircraft crashed near Turkey's border with Syria, reports say.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-22513439
Note: 13 May 2013 Last updated at 21:43 GMT
Wolferz
05-14-13, 02:03 PM
Talk about your NO FLY ZONE!:down:
Stealhead
05-14-13, 04:04 PM
I doubt the Syrians would be stupid enough to try and shoot down a Turkish in Turkish airspace though such an act is possible.Most likely it was an accident of some kind.
It is possible that the pilot may have planned to eject and either he ejected at a bad angle inverted towards the ground at low altitude or perhaps with the dorsal aimed at a hillside or mountain at low altitude.Also the ejection seat can work perfectly but the technicians could have improperly packed the chutes.Assuming that he managed to actually eject before the aircraft hit the ground or fell apart.
Jimbuna
05-14-13, 04:09 PM
Speculation is inevitable considering the current problems in the area.
Platapus
05-14-13, 04:23 PM
When I was working with the F-16 in the 80's we called them the "falling falcon". F-16's sometimes just stop flying. :yep:
A condition I doubt improves with age. :nope:
Stealhead
05-14-13, 04:43 PM
Always a trade off with any modern fighter design you want it to have high agility which means a very unstable platform that requires fly-by-wire to fly.If the computers fail or if an important control surface fails sometimes the computers even cant keep up and you have a 30 million dollar stone.
It does show you just how much a fly-by-wire system is doing when you look at an airframe so unstable that it requires FBY.Crazy to think that in the F-16 and F-22 to name just a few that the stick does not connect to any control surface but rather a series of computers that constantly receive inputs as to the conditions and also receive inputs from the pilot which it must then correlate.
Now an A-10 you'd need to rip an entire wing off in order for her to drop.Of course the Hog is not exactly a good dog fighter.
I believe, I hope and I pray it was a technical issue that made the F-16 crash.
It would absolutely not be good for the region if it was the Syrians.
Markus
Could be bird hit at low level and engine failure.
I doubt FBW issues very much , in particular in this jet.
Wolferz
05-15-13, 07:56 AM
Gremlins strike again.
That's my story and I'm sticking to it.:salute:
Stealhead
05-15-13, 12:06 PM
Could be bird hit at low level and engine failure.
I doubt FBW issues very much , in particular in this jet.
An engine failure would cause serious control issues for the FBW in an F-16 actually.Remember the F-16 is a highly unstable airframe it needs the FBW to fly at all if the engine where to fail specifically at lower speeds and altitudes an F-16 would rapidly become uncontrollable.FBW is not a miracle worker even if it works perfectly if a major component fails it can not redesign the airframe to fly in a different manor.
The majority of F-16 crashes are caused by engine failures which is not a direct failure of the FBW per say but the FBW simply cant keep control once the engine fails and enough airspeed is lost.Of course all F-16 pilots(except IDF) are trained by the USAF and they know the points at which the aircraft is no longer controllable and can not be saved.
Interestingly doing some quick reading it seems that all operators of the F-16 are seeing an increase of crashes.Lockeed-Martin blames most crashes on pilot error of course.:hmmm:
The "old" saying is two engines are better than one when one engine fails the other engine will function perfectly long enough for you to fly into the ground.
Sailor Steve
05-15-13, 12:09 PM
I doubt FBW issues very much , in particular in this jet.
That's what they told us when Hill AFB here in Utah lost a bunch of them back in the late '70s. PR said no, everybody else said yes.
Stealhead
05-15-13, 12:25 PM
When the aircraft manufacturer tends to blame pilot error that makes me suspect that the FBW is to blame.
Platapus
05-15-13, 04:59 PM
That's what they told us when Hill AFB here in Utah lost a bunch of them back in the late '70s. PR said no, everybody else said yes.
In FY 1983, when I was stationed at Hill, half of the US F-16 crashes were at Hill (Utah Test and Training Range). Half. We spent a lot of time scraping F-16s and their pilots off the salt flats. :nope:
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