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B-52 drops engine during flight

52051

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This just show you the equpiment/maintainence condition of the US military.

Instead of drop bombs, the bombers in the US drop engines:
A B-52 bomber on a training flight near Minot Air Force Base in North Dakota lost an engine mid-flight but was able to land safely with all of its crew aboard, according to an Air Force spokesman.

The crew "declared an in-flight emergency when the pilot discovered that an engine departed the aircraft," according to an Air Force spokesman.

"There were no weapons on board and it was a local training mission. The aircraft landed safely with no injuries to the five personnel on board," the spokesman added.

The incident occurred mid-morning on Wednesday, the same day that departing Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James was visiting the base as part of a farewell tour.

An Air Force helicopter sent to recover the wreckage "located possible engine debris" in an unpopulated area about 25 nautical miles northeast of the base, Air Force officials added.

Officials said that there was no threat to public safety and that an investigation has been started.

https://www.yahoo.com/gma/b-52-bomb...ng-flight-122756698--abc-news-topstories.html

https://www.reddit.com/r/AirForce/comments/5m45eg/engine_drops_out_of_b52_during_training_at_minot/
 
"The dear departed" :lol::lol:
Well that's a serious issue and I hope they investigate it properly and address this issue.
 
Oh, I thought the Americans said the Russians and Chinese had poor built equipment.
 
lol at another threads blown out of proportion by the Chinese member here.

First of all, Engine dismounting (or part of Engine Dismounting) is one of the quite common technical issue for aircraft that had an accident, engine was bolt on the wing with 4 to 8 large bolt, and these bolt were not inspect until the engine comes out, and it does not do that until you hit the most extensive check, which for Civil Aviation, it's the D Check. Or Airworthness check (You do them when you change the aircraft registration)

A D-Check does not perform regularly, roughtly every 6 years in civil aviation, and it willtake LONGER in military aviation as they don't fly Military aircraft as frequent as Civil aircraft. So if there are anything happened to the bolt, it could take upto 10 years to find out.

Another thing is, B-52 is a VERY OLD plane, the last one come out of production is in July 1962, that's 54 years ago. No B-52 airframe are yonger than 50 years. Old plane felt aparts. It have nothing to do with maintence issue or build quality, infact, this is the FIRST engine seperation for an aicraft that have been in continous operation in over 50 years. That alone is a testiment on build quality.

Of course, this is a serious issue nonetheness, but this is not about how inept the USAF maintence crew were nor how bad is the USAF Aircraft quality, it's solely about ages of aircraft. When an aircraft reaches certain age, it started to fall aparts, and they should ram up the maintenance regime to reflect the old age of this bomber, better yet, replace them.

But it's always fun to look at some people open their mouth without knowing the topic at hand, LOL
 
lol at another threads blown out of proportion by the Chinese member here.

First of all, Engine dismounting (or part of Engine Dismounting) is one of the quite common technical issue for aircraft that had an accident, engine was bolt on the wing with 4 to 8 large bolt, and these bolt were not inspect until the engine comes out, and it does not do that until you hit the most extensive check, which for Civil Aviation, it's the D Check. Or Airworthness check (You do them when you change the aircraft registration)

A D-Check does not perform regularly, roughtly every 6 years in civil aviation, and it willtake LONGER in military aviation as they don't fly Military aircraft as frequent as Civil aircraft. So if there are anything happened to the bolt, it could take upto 10 years to find out.

Another thing is, B-52 is a VERY OLD plane, the last one come out of production is in July 1962, that's 54 years ago. No B-52 airframe are yonger than 50 years. Old plane felt aparts. It have nothing to do with maintence issue or build quality, infact, this is the FIRST engine seperation for an aicraft that have been in continous operation in over 50 years. That alone is a testiment on build quality.

Of course, this is a serious issue nonetheness, but this is not about how inept the USAF maintence crew were nor how bad is the USAF Aircraft quality, it's solely about ages of aircraft. When an aircraft reaches certain age, it started to fall aparts, and they should ram up the maintenance regime to reflect the old age of this bomber, better yet, replace them.

But it's always fun to look at some people open their mouth without knowing the topic at hand, LOL
i mentioned that in a different thread but on the same story
https://defence.pk/threads/engine-d...-at-minot-air-force-base.470908/#post-9080096
@WebMaster can you merge the threads
 
Nice way to put it.. "Engine has departed..."
Like one fine morning the engine just had enough and said "Fukc this siht, I am otta here..." <Drops> "Geranimoooooooo.....!"
 

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