DWalt
Member
Just saw that a $70M F-18 went over the side of the Harry S. Truman because the tow crew lost control. Any carrier squids here who can explain how that could have happened?
And the end of a few Naval careers. Maybe more than a few.Boy, I bet that's a lot of paperwork.
News story said that the F-18 would probably not be salvageable. A towing vehicle also went over the side.Probably gotta send a few charges down there blow it up
"I thought you said YOU set the parking brake!"
She had just come out of SLEP and was homeported at Mayport during work ups for our Med Cruise. This was 82-84. We were assigned to CV-17.AJ, when were you aboard the SARA? When she was at Mayport?
If the ship was taking severe/radical evasive action to avoid a incoming attack, you can't really blame any one group.Like CherryPointMarine posted in Post #2, you gotta be there to understand what happened. Could have been a mistake by the directors, could have been a mistake by the tow tractor driver, could have been the brake rider made a mistake, could have been a mistake by the Blue Shirt (chocks the aircraft) or a combination of any or all of those. The flight Deck is heavily coated with non-skid, but at times it does get slick and things will slide (like aircraft). If the ship rolls to much then things slide easily. Empty weight of an F-18 is 23,000 pounds and loaded (fuel and ordnance up to 52.000 pounds. Can be hard to control with a tow tractor (we used a TA-75 which weighed 10,000 pounds to tow with). Wait until the official report comes out. The media is speculating half the time, or making up what the want to say. Just lucky that no one was killed. The flight deck of a carrier is one of the most dangerous places in the world to work during flight ops. If you have never been there don't make guesses at what happened. I worked the flight deck on USS Saratoga as a "Flight Deck Coordinator" for a couple of years.