F-35 'mishap'

BOP

Well-Known Member

Marines under fire for flying $80M F-35 over SC during thunderstorm when report shows jets CAN'T handle storms: Pilot ejected due to 'bad weather' before jet 'flipped', flew 100ft above trees in 'zombie mode' and crashed in field

  • A Marine flying a F-35 Lightning II ejected on Sunday only 1,000ft above ground
  • The F-35 kept flying for around 60 miles before crashing in a South Carolina field
  • Questions are now being asked as to why the training exercise was carried out
  • The plane is at risk during thunderstorms and there was bad weather at take off


A F-35 jet could have crashed on Sunday due to poor weather in South Carolina, new audio suggests - as questions mount as to why the disastrous training exercise was allowed to proceed.

The F-35B Lightning II which the unnamed Marine pilot was flying is believed to be at risk of malfunctions if it flies in thunderstorms, according to a Forbes investigation in November.

Its sister jet, the F-35A, is more severely affected and cannot fly within 25 miles of lightning.

The issue lies within the F-35's OBIGGS (Onboard Inert Gas Generation) system, which pumps nitrogen-enriched air into its fuel tanks to inert them, preventing the aircraft from exploding if it is struck by lightning.

'F-35B and C variants have some of the same OBIGGS issues as the F-35A, but have been able to alleviate operational impacts,' said Chief Petty Officer Matthew Olay, spokesman for the F-35 Joint Program Office, in an email to Forbes last year.
Ah, yes...the F-35 Program, aka Joint Program Office (JPO). Motto: "Where careers go to die."
 

spr1975wshs

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Ah, yes...the F-35 Program, aka Joint Program Office (JPO). Motto: "Where careers go to die."
My Mrs. considered Triton in that category. She escaped a couple years ago to the C-27 program.
 
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