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C5 crashes near Dover AFB
ABC News | 04/03/2006

Posted on 04/03/2006 5:10:20 AM PDT by Trust but Verify

No details per ABC radio


TOPICS: Breaking News; US: Delaware
KEYWORDS: c5; doverafb; planecrash; usaf
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To: Fatuncle

McChord about 1982, right? I was sitting in a security vehicle on the edge of the runway. Wondering if we were going to have a major incident and cordon off the area or who knows what. Thankfully, all personnel exited unscathed, glad to see your brother was okay also.
(now I've got that Micky Mouse "It's a small world" song in my head)


261 posted on 04/04/2006 5:43:51 AM PDT by Mustng959 (Peace.....Through Superior Firepower)
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To: Frank_2001

No LCD display in the back when I was flying C-5's in the 80's. Given budget constraints and the low priority assigned to that type of passenger consideration, I doubt that they have added such a thing since then. On occassion, when out over the ocean on long flights, we invited passengers in small groups from the back to come up to the cockpit for a "look see." I doubt that this is permissible today.


262 posted on 04/04/2006 10:54:27 AM PDT by Orca
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To: Trust but Verify

In the helio pics of the crash, the plane looks like it was never taken out of take-off configuration.

Could someone confirm?


263 posted on 04/04/2006 10:59:55 AM PDT by azhenfud (He who always is looking up seldom finds others' lost change.)
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To: leadpenny
I just wonder if one of the four got hung up in reverse mode and they couldn't get it shut down? I hate to speculate.

Very doubtful. The only engines that are capable of in-flight reverse are the two inboards. To get them in that mode required peculiar throttle movements (if I remember correctly: lifting over a stop and moving backwards and down) that no one would make after takeoff. To me, the most likely scenario remains a multiple bird-strike causing the near simultaneous loss of two engines.

264 posted on 04/04/2006 11:16:18 AM PDT by Orca
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To: azhenfud
n the helio pics of the crash, the plane looks like it was never taken out of take-off configuration. Could someone confirm?

The landing configuration is very much like the takeoff configuration (ie., gear and flaps down). Flaps down is what the pics seem to show. If the bird strike scenario is correct, at some point after the strike and engine failures, the pilot would probably be trying to get the gear and flaps up (if they were not already up) in order to reduce drag.

Drag reduction would be critical so that he could gain altitude and airspeed and make it around to the south of the airport for an emergency approach and landing — difficult to do at heavy weight on only two remaining engines. At some point the gear and flaps have to come down again and the drag increases beyond the capability of two engines to maintain level flight.

Then you are in a controlled and irreversible descent even with the two remaining engines at max power. If you have enough altitude, and if you can control the adverse yaw, and if you can maintain your airspeed, and if you are close enough to the runway, you will make it. Unfortunately, one or more of those ifs didn't work out for this C-5 pilot.

But fortunately, by God's grace, they all survived. The accident board will sort it all out and give us an accurate read on the causes later on.

265 posted on 04/04/2006 12:01:57 PM PDT by Orca
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To: Mustng959

If I remember correctly, he was in transit from Korea or Okinawa. He was at that time in the communication/security branch of the US Army. Beyond those details memory fails me.


266 posted on 04/04/2006 2:24:22 PM PDT by Fatuncle (Of course I'm ignorant. I'm here to learn.)
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To: Orca
But fortunately, by God's grace, they all survived. The accident board will sort it all out and give us an accurate read on the causes later on.

The latest update I read states that 11 of the 17 crew and passengers have been released from the hospital. The six remaining in 2 Delaware hospitals are all listed in "fair" condition.

267 posted on 04/04/2006 2:52:38 PM PDT by Gabz (Smokers are the beta version)
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To: Orca; Gabz

Apparantly, the plane was 10 minutes into flight, over or very near New Jersey when they turned around. My father, who volunteers at the base said that the word was mechanical failure of some sort. On the way back in, they clipped a telephone pole, which caused the nose to jerk up, and the tail down, which is what ripped off the tail. Then, on the hard "rebound", the nose went down hard causing that separation.

It's still early, and the only "official" parts of the above that I've heard from multiple sources are the 10 minutes into flight and hitting a telephone pole at some point. If the plane was already over Jersey, I would think that rules out (or at least minimizes the possibility of) birds as a factor. Then again, I'm a banker, not an aviation expert, and I didn't stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night :)


268 posted on 04/04/2006 6:20:26 PM PDT by Hurricane Andrew (History teaches that wars begin when governments believe the price of aggression is cheap.)
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To: PilloryHillary

The cockpit is designed to seperate from the cargo compartment/fuselage on impact. So it done as it was designed.


269 posted on 04/04/2006 8:14:03 PM PDT by DanielC3
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To: ReformedBeckite

This is a C-5! A C-17 does not have a retractable nose. Only the C-5 has this capability.


270 posted on 04/04/2006 10:10:24 PM PDT by BoeingRep
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To: BoeingRep
My comment was reflective of a C-17 being kind of small next to a C-5. If I remember right the freeper of comment 8 had posted a picture of a C-17 as a C-5, Someone on comment 15 corrected the fellow. And my comment was an attempt to add some humor to the fact that the freeper on 8 was wrong. Even though they would almost look close to being the same aircraft in seperate pictures, the C-5 would definintly be bigger if parked next to each other was my intent of the comment. After thinking about it I was thinking of a C-141 though instead of a C-17. I've seen several C-141's parked nearby C-5's. Thinking about it I've never seen a C-17, so I won't really know about it's size in comparison.

I was reviewing some of the eariler comments, How does the military come up with the numbers. It seems like C-5 would of been some aircraft that would of came out before the C-17 and the C-17 would of came out before the C-141. But it seems like there's no pattern in the numbers. How do these numbers come about.

271 posted on 04/05/2006 7:06:15 AM PDT by ReformedBeckite
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To: ReformedBeckite

US Military Aircraft Designation Systems

http://www.aerospaceweb.org/question/history/q0012.shtml


272 posted on 04/05/2006 8:05:36 AM PDT by gboshort
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To: Gabz

4/4/2006 - DOVER AIR FORCE BASE, Del. -- Air Force officials released the names of the 17 survivors of the C-5 Galaxy crash here April 3.

Survivor names, base and medical conditions are as follows:

Capt. Brian Lafreda, Dover, fair

Lt. Col. Robert Moorman, Dover, fair

Lt. Col. Harland Nelson, Dover, fair

Master Sgt. Timothy Feiring, Dover, released

Master Sgt. Michael Benford, Dover, fair

Tech. Sgt. Vincent Dvorak, Dover, fair

Master Sgt. Brenda Kremer, Dover, released

Chief Master Sgt. David Burke, Dover, released

Chief Master Sgt. George Mosley, Dover, released

Tech. Sgt. Henry Fortney, Dover, released

Senior Airman Scott Schaffner, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, released

Tammy Lucas, Lockheed Martin employee, fair

Staff Sgt. David Abrams, Dover, released

Senior Airman Nicholas Vather, Dover, fair

Retired Chief Petty Officer Paul Kath, released

Hannelore Kath, released

Retired Tech. Sgt. Raul Salamanca, released


273 posted on 04/05/2006 11:24:48 AM PDT by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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To: Hurricane Andrew

Wings-level landing might have saved C-5 crash survivors

http://www.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123018580

4/4/2006 - SAN ANTONIO (AFPN) -- A veteran C-5 Galaxy pilot said all 17 people survived the April 3 plane crash at Dover Air Force Base, Del., mainly because the pilot did his job.

Col. Udo McGregor said the “100 percent reason” everyone aboard survived the crash was because the pilot did a wings-level landing.

“The survivors are survivors because he put it on the ground wings level,” said the colonel, commander of the 439th Operations Group at Westover Air Reserve Base, Mass.

The transport took off from Dover at about 6:20 a.m. bound for Spain and Southwest Asia. On board were Airmen and several passengers. Base officials said the aircrew noticed a problem with the aircraft soon after takeoff and the pilot turned the aircraft around to land back at the base.

But at 6:42 a.m. the aircraft crashed into a grassy field and broke up into several pieces. Base officials think the aircraft might have struck a utility pole, which cut off the aircraft’s six-story tail section. It had a quarter million pounds of fuel, but miraculously did not catch fire.

Colonel McGregor, a command pilot with more than 10,600 flying hours -- more than 7,000 of those in the Galaxy -- said there are others reasons why the accident cost the Air Force only a transport aircraft.

One is that the aircraft -- almost as long as a football field -- has many crumple zones.

“If you watch car commercials on TV and watch them do the crash testing -- the more metal you have -- the larger the piece of equipment -- the more the chance you have of survival,” he said.

And the cargo plane has so much cargo space below its wings that a wings-level landing gives those on board “a pretty good chance of surviving,” he said.

“It’s an incredibly safe airplane,” said the colonel from Savannah, Ga. “Very, very few accidents for the millions and millions of flying hours that it’s accomplished.”

The colonel has flown all over the world in the C-5. He knows the transport inside and out. The emergency that the Dover crew faced -- a heavy weight, three-engine emergency return -- is a “pretty standard” procedure for which Galaxy pilots are well prepared, he said.

“In this particular case, the experience level of the crew would suggest they’ve done it hundreds of times -- practiced it hundreds of times in a simulator,” he said.

Colonel McGregor has had to deal with similar in-flight emergencies during his 15 years at the helm of the heavy jet. More than once he has had to land a heavily-loaded Galaxy with only three engines. But with about a million parts, many mechanical things can go wrong with the aging aircraft, which entered the Air Force inventory in the June 1970. After so many hours in the air, the aircraft is bound to experience one or two emergencies, he said.

“That’s just part of flying something for an extensive amount of time that has this many moving parts,” the colonel said. “It’s a very complicated airplane.”

The colonel remembers a flight into Osan Air Base, South Korea, when the air conditioning turbine on his C-5 malfunctioned and filled the entire aircraft with smoke. The aircrew made an emergency landing and did an emergency evacuation of 73 passengers -- who exited down the slide from the passenger compartment on the back of the aircraft.

At Dover, the aircrew also used the inflatable slide to evacuate the aircraft.

Colonel McGregor said the aircraft has a great safety record. And the upgrades through which it is going -- like getting new avionics and engines -- will extend its life “a significant number of years.”

“I would say more than 20 years is probably a reasonable guess,” he said. And with the upgrades, “it’s probably even more than that.”

The colonel said two boards will now convene to find out the cause of the accident. The first, a safety investigation board, will try to determine what the issues or problems were. They have 30 to 45 days to come up with answers.

Then, an accident investigation board will convene to “find the magic BB, the causal effect -- the things or things that caused or created the accident,” the colonel said.

The accident investigation board will probably have to have some kind of resolution to the commander of Air Mobility Command by the end of May.

“So it’s a fairly rapid process,” he said.


274 posted on 04/05/2006 11:26:04 AM PDT by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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To: A.A. Cunningham
You are mistaken! I worked on C-5A/Bs for 10 years!
A C-17s nose does not open up like the one pictured.
Search C17 and look at the pictures and you will see other
differences like the main landing gear doors (2 on each side) on a C-5 and only 1 on the C-17
275 posted on 04/08/2006 8:28:44 PM PDT by mummy
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To: JRios1968; Aeronaut

This is from one of the instructors re: the C5 crash:




This has really turned fascinating. A good buddy of mine was a Stan Eval guy in the wing at Dover and still has connections. He gave me the current skinny on the crash--none of it official--until the board says so.

It was not a bird ingestion but a "reverser unlock" on the #2 engine that started this. They lost a C-5 with all aboard a few years back in Germany for the same cause. This crew however shut down the engine before an actual unstow took place. The airplane was well over 700K gross weight with FOB of over 300K. The airplane had the newest version of the C-5 flight deck with big panel glass. Unfortunately, only one of the three pilots was really comfortable with the new equipment and FMS.

The crew decided because of their weight to fly their approach to the longest runway, which unfortunately was only being served that day by a Tacan (fancy VOR for you civilian types) approach. They also decided to fly a full flap approach to keep the approach speed down. This isn't prohibited--just highly discouraged. The recommended flap setting for a three engine approach is Flaps 40. During the approach the crew became worried about not having enough power to fly a full flap approach and selected flaps 40--which they were now too slow for. Here's the point all you glass cockpit guys should sit up and take notice about. The one guy who was familiar with the new glass and FMS was also the one flying the aircraft. He became distracted inputting the new approach speed in the FMS. There was also some confusion about just who was flying the A/C while he had his head down updating the speed. Long story short--they got way slow and into the shaker, and actually stuck the tail into the trees and it departed the aircraft first. The nose pitched down hard and the nose and left wing impacted next snapping off the nose. Several cockpit occupants suffered spinal compression injuries. The guys sitting at the crew table behind the cockpit actually came to a stop with their legs dangling out over the ground.

The miracle of this was the left outboard fuel tank was broken open and none of that fuel managed to find something hot enough to ignite it and the other 300k. Again, a bunch of very lucky people.


276 posted on 04/12/2006 9:06:36 AM PDT by Dashing Dasher (To avoid criticism do nothing, say nothing, be nothing. -- Elbert Hubbard)
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To: Dashing Dasher

I read this and my fairly well-trained eye (I attended the Air Force Crash Investigation Course a few years ago,) actually can see it develop in that very sequence. My observation upon seeing the pictures in the media (and some that never made the media) agrees with this scenario.

Unfortunately, I can't discuss much further, as it's starting to look like I am a prime candidate to be part of the Accident Investigation Board...


277 posted on 04/12/2006 5:09:19 PM PDT by JRios1968 (E=mc3...the origin of "friends don't let friends derive drunk.")
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To: JRios1968

I see.

This info has made many of the aviation boards around the country. So - you'll probably see it again.

Good luck - keep me posted - if and when you can.

I'll ping you to the other news of the day.


278 posted on 04/12/2006 5:22:29 PM PDT by Dashing Dasher (To avoid criticism do nothing, say nothing, be nothing. -- Elbert Hubbard)
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To: Dashing Dasher

It's still in preliminary stages whether I get involved or not. One thing's for certain, you will be in the know, as far as AF rules allow me.


279 posted on 04/12/2006 6:53:02 PM PDT by JRios1968 (E=mc3...the origin of "friends don't let friends derive drunk.")
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To: mummy

No, it is you who is mistaken. The photo in post #8, which was removed long before you began flapping your gums, was of a C-17, not a C-5.


280 posted on 05/14/2006 3:08:58 PM PDT by A.A. Cunningham
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