Air Force F-22 crashes near Southern California's Edwards Air Force Base; no word on

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Air Force F-22 crashes near Southern California's Edwards Air Force Base;

Air Force F-22 crashes near Southern California's Edwards Air Force Base;


By Associated Press
1:40 PM EDT, March 25, 2009

EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) — The Air Force says an F-22 fighter has crashed near Edwards Air Force Base in the high desert of Southern California.

Pentagon spokeswoman Lt. Col. Ann Stefanek confirmed the crash Wednesday but had no other details.

Stefanek had no information on the status of the pilot.

The F-22 is the Air Force's new top-of-the-line fighter.


Link
http://www.wtkr.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-f-22-crash,0,6012143.story
 
Last edited:
35 miles from base - still no word on the pilot

y Associated Press 3:27 PM EDT, March 25, 2009
45786496.jpg
Map locates Edward’s Air Force Base, California where a jet fighter crashed (W. Castello, AP / March 25, 2009)

EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) — One of the Air Force's top-of-the-line F-22 fighter jets crashed Wednesday in the high desert of Southern California. There was no immediate word on whether the pilot ejected.

The F-22 Raptor crashed 35 miles northeast of Edwards Air Force Base, Pentagon spokesman Gary Strassburg said. He had no information about the area where the jet crashed.

Rescue crews were en route and the status of the pilot was unknown, said Air Force Maj. David Small at the Pentagon.

Small said the jet, assigned to the 411th Flight Test Squadron of Edwards' 412th Test Wing, was on a test mission but he did not know its nature. The crash occurred at midmorning.

Call to the base public affairs phone numbers were answered by recording machines.

The radar-evading F-22s each cost $140 million and are designed for air dominance. The warplanes can carry air-to-air missiles but are capable of ground attack as well.

The $65 billion F-22 program is embattled, with some opponents contending that a different warplane under development, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, is more versatile and less costly at $80 million per plane.

F-22s were grounded for two weeks after one crashed at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada in December 2004. They were cleared again to fly after a review, and an Air Force statement at the time said officials were "highly confident in the design, testing and development" of the aircraft. The pilot in that crash successfully ejected.

The U.S. is committed to 183 F-22s, down from the original plan laid out in the 1980s to build 750.

Its prime contractor, Lockheed Martin Corp., says there are 95,000 jobs at 1,000 companies connected to the F-22.

A spokesman for Bethesda, Md.-based Lockheed Martin referred all calls about the crash to the Air Force.

Lockheed is trying to convince the Pentagon to buy as many as 20 more F-22s. The military is expected to signal its intentions when the 2010 Defense Department budget is released next month.

The F-22 is able to fly at supersonic speeds without using afterburners. That allows it to reach and stay in a battlespace faster and longer without being easily detected.

The fighter, powered by two Pratt & Whitney engines, is 62 feet long, has a wingspan of 44½ feet and is flown by a single pilot.



http://www.wtkr.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-f-22-crash,0,6012143.story
 
Test pilot killed in crash of Air Force fighter jet

Test pilot killed in crash of Air Force fighter jet

RIP

The F-22 Raptor, a $140-million warplane known for its stealth capability and armaments, goes down in the high desert northeast of Edwards Air Force Base.
By Tony Perry
March 26, 2009
A veteran test pilot was killed Wednesday when an F-22 Raptor, an Air Force fighter plane designed to provide "air dominance" with its missiles and cannons, crashed in the high desert outside Edwards Air Force Base.

The pilot was identified as David Cooley, 49, a 21-year Air Force veteran who joined Lockheed Martin Corp., the plane's principal contractor, in 2003.







Cooley, of Palmdale, was pronounced dead at Victor Valley Community Hospital in Victorville.

The plane, assigned to the 411th Flight Test Squadron, crashed while it was on a test mission about 35 miles northeast of the sprawling base.

Air Force spokesman Vince King declined to reveal the purpose of the flight.


"Aircraft that fly at Edwards Air Force Base fly test missions to evaluate everything from airframe structures to propulsion and avionics and electronic warfare, all with the aim of ensuring weapons systems are suitable for their intended combat missions," King said.

In 2004, an F-22 crashed at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada, leading to a two-week grounding of all F-22s for a maintenance review. The pilot ejected safely. An Air Force investigation found no indication of a design or other systemic problem.

All military crashes are investigated for possible design, maintenance or pilot errors. A board of officers is investigating the F-22 crash.

At a cost of about $140 million, the Raptor is built to be virtually invisible to enemy radar and to fire air-to-air missiles. The plane reportedly can fly at twice the speed of sound, has "supercruise capability" and can fly without afterburners, allowing it to remain over a target longer without being detected.

Initially designed during the latter stages of the Cold War to allow the U.S. to defeat the air forces of the Soviet Union, the Raptor has been reconfigured to enhance its use to strike ground targets.

The Raptor formally joined the Air Force fleet in 2005 and was considered fully operational in 2007. Its boosters call it the world's most technologically advanced and easily maneuvered warplane.

Although the Raptor reportedly has not flown in Iraq or Afghanistan, some aerospace observers suggest that its stealth capability and armaments make it the ideal warplane to penetrate the S-300 air defense system that Russia is allegedly on the verge of selling to Iran.

"There is little doubt that the F-22 can neutralize the S-300," Thomas D. Crimmins, a national defense fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, wrote this month. Crimmins is an Air Force lieutenant colonel and a pilot with 3,000 hours of flying time.

The Israeli government, increasingly worried about Iran's nuclear program, has shown interest in buying the F-22. But the plane is on the list of military hardware banned for foreign sales.

In the 1980s, the Air Force hoped to acquire 750 F-22s. So far, the federal government has committed to buy only 183, and debate in Congress and the Pentagon continues over the number needed, amid intense lobbying by Lockheed Martin.

Its critics claim the F-22 is too expensive and is a holdover from the Cold War that is struggling to find a mission. Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates has been critical of some aspects of the F-22 program.

Although much about the F-22 remains secret, the Air Force has begun to take the plane to air shows to raise its public profile. Among those shows was the 2009 Thunder in the Desert Air Show last weekend at Luke Air Force Base in Arizona.

Link
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-crash26-2009mar26,0,5611835.story
 
It's strange to me that the news pronounces the pilots dead at a hospital or even enroute instead of at the scene. They did that when Jim LeRoy crashed at the Dayton Airshow in 2007.[/quote]

This is because only a health care provider can officially pronounce someone dead. And since doctors don't normally ride with EMS personal the patient can only be pronounced dead at a hospital.
 
They can also be pronounced by the Coroner or Deputy Coroner on scene. Depending on the jurisdiction a Coroner doesn't always have to a medical doctor. I've worked with some that are funeral directors,Paramedics and EMT's. It's an elected position.

Matter of fact all Deputies in my Dept. are sworn as Deputy Coroners as well, in the event a death pronouncement is needed and our coroner is unavailable.
 
RIP, clear skies.

Anyone know the identity of the pilot that ejected out of the first crash?

Over here we had the same testpilot crash two Gripens before he bowed out of the testing program..One was over our capital.

The new avionics are perhaps not for everyone, I´m just saying..
 
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