So Why Did That V-22 Crash?

The Air Force has released its probe into the first combat loss of the Pentagon’s troubled V-22 tilt-rotor aircraft. It happened near Qalat, Afghanistan, in April, killing four of the 20 aboard, including the chief pilot. The $116 million V-22 had to make a fast landing and flipped after its nose gear collapsed when it ran into a ditch. The investigative team believed a sudden loss of power from one of the aircraft’s two engines was a major cause of the accident.

A V-22 in Afghanistan

But a senior Air Force general disagreed, ruling that the available evidence “does not support a determination of engine loss as a substantially contributing factor.” That decision largely shifts responsibility for the accident onto the shoulders of the dead pilot and his crew. “The mishap crew’s task saturation, the mishap copilot’s distraction, the mishap copilot’s negative transfer of a behavior learned in a previous aircraft, the mishap crew’s pressing to accomplish their first combat mission of the deployment” all were cited as factors. But the chief investigator is sticking to his guns, according to an interview he did with the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

Of course, a lot of this kind of analysis is informed deduction and guesswork. That’s because, as the Air Force noted in its statement releasing the report, its probe was hampered because the V-22′s black box – which records lots of flight data and is invaluable in figuring out what went wrong — was “destroyed and therefore not available for analysis.” What they didn’t say was that the U.S. military bombed the stricken V-22 and destroyed it to keep the aircraft – and the black box – from falling into enemy (or, for that matter, investigators’) hands.

Related Topics: tilt-rotor, v-22, National Security
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  • gysgt213

    Just in case one does not know. This aircraft is also known as the Osprey. This aircraft has been crashing and killing Marines since the 1990s. There have been numerous documented incidents of out right lying about the causes of these crashes, botched investigations into the crashes and evidence of mismanagement throughout the program to develop and deploy this aircraft. Below are some links if you are interested in more than a he said she said.
    .
    http://www.zpub.com/notes/osprey.html
    .
    http://www.iasa.com.au/folders/Safety_Issues/others/Ospreymenu.html

  • http://erieangel.wordpress.com erieangel

    the U.S. military bombed the stricken V-22 and destroyed it to keep the aircraft – and the black box – from falling into enemy (or, for that matter, investigators’) hands.
    .
    .
    .
    Pretty much says it all. The military is saddled with a bad product and will do anything to keep the truth of just how bad it is under wraps.

  • http://www.oneutah.org clifflyon

    I’ve heard (through reliable chatter) that most of the helicopter crashes in Afghanistan are from rotor blade icing.

    Has anyone else heard that?

  • http://patricksartor.wordpress.com patricksartor

    Ever since I saw the Osprey in the news, I always looked forward to the day that it would have a civilian counterpart since that would mean that you could take off and land almost anywhere, carry far more people than a helicopter and move far faster than a helicopter.

    Obviously no civilian counterpart has been built since the V-22 has bad habit of killing it’s occupants.

    But when it comes down to soldiers or the military industrial complex, hawks who adore spending money on the military love their corporate sponsors far more than the soldiers every time.

  • pintortwo

    Was it moisture that caused this crash? -like when “The most expensive crash in Air Force history… was caused by water clogging aircraft sensors” (link), according to Air Combat Command, …at $2.2 billion per plane!!
    .
    Maybe a better question than “why did it crash” is “why are we building them” considering their unreliability (see gysgt213 @ 1).
    .
    Well, I have the answer. Because (according to wiki) it’s paid $27 billion to Boenig and Bell Helicopter through ’08.

  • pintortwo

    at $2.2 billion per plane!!
    .
    http://www.cdi.org/issues/aviation/B296.html

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  • kmar20009

    I’m glad we bombed that Osprey so that the Afghans couldn’t use it to build their own fleet of them. Let’s see at $122 million apiece, that would bankrupt the country halfway through the prototype I guess.

  • mjshep

    “That decision largely shifts responsibility for the accident onto the shoulders of the dead pilot and his crew.”
    .
    Blame the dead guy. That always works.

  • cleareye1

    This loser of a program is giving the “Star Wars” boondoggle a run for the money.
    We have all forgotten the warning by Eisenhower fro which we are paying dearly as the country becomes weaker and weaker. But our video game warriors are having lots of fun!

  • cleareye1

    Like the ‘enemy’ would know what to do with any information they found. It’s damn scary when the war profiteers are able to kill American combat people without repercussions. The politicians are so deeply in debt to these creeps they are afraid to challenge them.
    Eisenhower was right!

  • cleareye1

    $122m>$2.2b!
    That’s 2.2 billion dollars for each plane, and that’s what the Penatgon admits to. In real world costs they could be costing us from 4 to 8 billion each!

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