Roadburner440
Charter Member 2010
BTW, I love how I am one of two mods on the FB page and John read that before I did!!!!!!!!
I thinkt the fact that the airplane was saveable after the forced landing in the field, just makes it all that much more horrible I think.... I mean, if the trucks couldn't have made it back there, they couldn't make it back... but to have to sit there and watch the poor son of a gun burn..... I couldn't have done it.....
For me that is what struck me the most as well.. Not necessarily that the aircraft is gone per say, but the way the media initially reported it. Then other people having to point out that it was intact when it landed. Is why I said when I saw what the media reported I surely though the crew had died cause all I saw was wings, and smoldering wreckage... The fact that the field could support that B-17 though proves to me it could have supported the trucks. There was a truck in the field after the larger blaze was extinguished in some of the photos. Either way it just wasn't meant to be. Was some very good and quick thinking on the pilots part though as more of the facts are emerging. Is what good airmanship is about. Saving lives both in the air and on the ground when the excrement hits the fan by following proper rules and procedures.


to comment on what bomber12 said...sentimental journy was at the EAA fly-in at yuba county last weekend and they were having some sort of troubles...im NOT speculating or rumormonging...but i have pics of the number two and three engines with the cowlings off and oil everywhere...the announcer kept saying there would be B17 rides..then you looked at the b17 and it was in pieces,,at one point they seemed to be trying to either start or just turn over the number two,,,it made a loud whirrring sound..the prop never turned..it smoked a little and popped..then a man on the ground with a headset on took off his headset and threw it across the pavement...
To comment to this, it is not just a regular occurance on warbirds, but almost ANY military aircraft. Everyday it is something new with the H-60's I work on. Whether it is the brand new ones having rivets backing out, engine problems, or severe avionics problems. To the older ones just getting fatigued, parts wearing out, and leaking fluid. Believe me there are days I have wanted to chuck my headset across the flight line too when you fix 1 hydraulic leak, and then another weak point gives and you start all over again. Some days the bird cooperates, and does what you want. Other days it has a mind of its own, and they are determined despite your best efforts to not get airborne. Is just the nature of the beast.