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HARRIER Pilot's Landing and Escape in Afghanistan

KEETARP

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That's amazing , If posted before delete it .
What was pilot thinking and doing for soo long , should have calculated it before and initiated ejection sequence immediately after crash-landing. I am sure it wasn't for stunt like what sukhoi pilot did.
 
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i think its air suckers which are pointed to the ground have not worked thats why it got crasehd at a point of getting the speed of harrier low which suckers do to make harrier speed lower so it can land safely

---------- Post added at 10:31 PM ---------- Previous post was at 10:30 PM ----------

but anyway i think you have done something each us want to see everytime thanx friend for you work
 
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The Harrier, which first entered service with the Royal Air Force in 1969, is famous as the world's first fixed-wing VSTOL (vertical or short take-off and landing) strike aircraft, capable of operating from short landing surfaces, aircraft carriers, unprepared strips, including grass strips, and to take off and land vertically.

The Harrier II (AV-8B), manufactured by British Aerospace and McDonnell Douglas (now BAE Systems and Boeing), replaced the HS Harrier in the UK Royal Air Force and in the US Marine Corps in 1985.

"The Harrier first entered service with the Royal Air Force in 1969."The GR9 is an upgrade of the GR7. The GR7 has been in service since 1995 with the UK RAF and been operationally deployed in the Gulf, the Balkans, Sierra Leone, Iraq and Afghanistan. All 69 of the RAF GR7 fleet are being upgraded by BAE Systems to the GR9 standard, which includes improved weapon-aiming systems and improved navigation, and adds new weapons to its arsenal.

The current versions of the Harrier are the single-seat GR9 and the T-12 two-seat trainer aircraft which can also be used in combat. The Harrier GR9 made its first flight in May 2003 and was accepted into service in September 2006. The in-service date (ISD) was defined as 24 operationally-capable GR9 and one T-12. The remaining 45 aircraft are to be delivered by 2009. Two GR9 were deployed to Afghanistan in January 2007, as part of the Nato International Security Force (ISAF).

The UK Royal Navy Sea Harriers were retired in March 2006. The RAF / Royal Navy Joint Force Harrier, based at RAF Cottesmore, is now operated with RAF Harrier GR7/9 aircraft.

Harrier GR9 design and roles
The GR9 is a single-seat, multi-role combat aircraft that can operate at night and at low-light levels in extreme environments, from a wide selection of locations including aircraft carriers and forward air bases.

One of the main roles of the Harrier is close air support that involves launching air attacks against hostile targets in close proximity to friendly forces. Harriers are usually employed in direct support of ground troops operating against enemy troop positions, tanks and artillery.

Harriers are also used for the air interdiction role in which the aircraft carry out low or medium-level attacks using precision-guided, freefall or retarded bombs. Harrier GR9 is also deployed on strike coordination and reconnaissance (SCAR) operations.

The BAE Military Air Solutions business group carries out the upgrade of the GR7 aircraft to GR9 standard. The upgrade activities and Harrier GR7 maintenance activities are moved together in a ten-day 'pulse' through a joint upgrade and maintenance programme (JUMP) at RAF Cottesmore.

GR9 avionics
The aircraft is equipped with forward-looking infrared (FLIR) and night-vision goggles. The new navigation system on the GR9 provides high-accuracy navigation and includes a ring laser gyroscope inertial navigation system coupled with a global positioning system.

"The current versions of the Harrier are the single-seat GR9 and the T-12 two-seat trainer aircraft."Tactical information exchange capability (TIEC) capability will be installed on the aircraft by the end of 2008. A team led by BAE with Rockwell Collins and General Dynamics is developing the TIEC capability, in order to network the RAF Tornado GR4 and Harrier GR9 jets, by installing and integrating link 16 and improved data modem (IDM) in the aircraft. The capability will integrate link 16 and IDM messages with the aircraft systems to provide the pilot and crews with enhanced situation awareness.

Targeting

The GR9 is fitted with the Lockheed Martin Sniper or the Selex TIALD 500 targeting pod. The improved pod enables pilots to find and identify groups or individual hostile soldiers in difficult terrain, for example small groups of insurgents in mountainous countryside.

The TIALD 500 is an upgraded version of the TIALD 300/400 series and incorporates a Denel medium wave (three to five micron) infrared camera, with a Selex 384 × 288 staring array. The new TIALD provides enhanced performance in terms of improved ranges for detection and identification. TIALD 500 is also equipped with transfer alignment capability which allows the pod sight to be aligned with the aircraft's weapon boresight.

An urgent operational requirement for third-generation targeting pods for the GR9 was raised by the UK Royal Air Force and the MoD invitations to tender were issued in late 2006. Lockheed Martin UK was awarded the contract in February 2007 to supply the sniper advanced targeting pod.

Sniper is a third-generation advanced targeting pod and is equipped with a full motion video downlink. The downlink enables the ground troops to see the same Sniper display as that displayed in the Harrier cockpit.

"The new navigation system on the GR9 provides high-accuracy navigation."The high-resolution optics in the Sniper allows pilots to detect, recognise and identify weapon caches and individuals carrying weapons while remaining beyond jet noise ranges.

The downlink provides enhanced and real-time situational awareness to the ground troops.

Deliveries began in March 2007 and full capability deployment started in June 2007.

Both TIALD 500 and the Sniper provide SCAR capability. The improved optics and infrared pointers on the Sniper provide improved capability in terms of locating, identifying and handing off targets to other assets.

Harrier weapons
The Harrier is armed with general-purpose bombs and cluster munitions, Paveway laser and GPS-guided bombs against buildings, Raytheon AGM-65 Maverick infrared guided anti-tank missiles and AIM-9 Sidewinder infrared-guided air-to-air missiles.

The Raytheon Paveway IV precision guided bomb is the latest generation of the Paveway family and entered service on Harrier GR9 aircraft deployed in Afghanistan in December 2008. Paveway IV uses dual-mode guidance with laser guidance and GPS-aided inertial navigation that incorporates anti-spoofing and anti-jamming technology. The weapon has good manoeuvrability and following launch it can turn and attack a target behind the delivery aircraft.

The GPS/IN system is supplied by Raytheon Systems at Glenrothes, Scotland. In order to attack relocatable and moving targets or fixed targets, the pilot is able to switch between guidance modes as necessary before or after weapon release. Paveway IV will be fitted with enhanced mk82 500lb warheads designed by Raytheon Missile Systems in Tucson. EDO MBM Technology based in Brighton is responsible for the supply of the Paveway IV aircraft umbilical interconnect system and quad containers.

"The GR9 is a single-seat, multi-role combat aircraft that can operate at night and at low levels."The Raytheon AGM-65 Maverick is a man-in-the-loop, low collateral damage, anti-tank and anti-ship, close air support missile.

The Brimstone anti-armour system will be deployed on the GR9 from 2008. The MBDA UK Brimstone fire-and-forget missile has a millimetre wave seeker operating at 94GHz which provides all-weather day-and-night capability. The missile is armed with a tandem high-explosive warhead. The Harrier GR9 is not fitted with a gun but can be armed with rockets.

Turbofan engine
The aircraft is equipped with the Rolls-Royce Pegasus vectored thrust turbofan engine. The GR9 Harriers are fitted with the Pegasus mk105 engine and the GR9A Harriers are fitted with the higher-rated Pegasus mk107 engine providing 23,400lb thrust.

The aircraft with the higher rated engine have been modified to incorporate a new metal, high-fatigue rated, rear fuselage section. The T-12 combat trainers will retain the Pegasus mk105 engines.
 
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Why didnt the guy pull out earlier?Was he scared of ejection..it was pretty close call.Few more seconds and he would have been in flames.
 
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That brings an important question in mind , how much reaction time does pilot have -to apply Brake-chute in case of such Impact landing . Could it be pilot knew before Air-brakes are faulty or such Impact Crash-landing will occur.
In fact I dont see Brake-chute coming out , also raises question suppose aircraft was loaded with missile and Guided bombs , how much safer they would be in case of fire.
 
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may be somehow the glass of cockpit got jammed and ejection was not possible because untilll the glass or the ejection rocket which pushes the seat in air was not workng may be the glass was a probleum than at last second may be pilot hit the glass with his pistol and than he hit the ejection button may be this be the case
 
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What is this one- Stunt
504x_00000122ad33bf521982c868004300c0002e001c.Sukhoi_ejection_in_flight.jpg


Check this video of above shot -
http://gizmodo.com/5330468/mystery-of-the-sukhoi-open-cockpit-jump-finally-revealed

Got more on Harrier from Spanish site-
Fotos del harrier estrellado en afganistan - Foros Escuadrón 69

Album&
 
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That brings an important question in mind , how much reaction time does pilot have -to apply Brake-chute in case of such Impact landing . Could it be pilot knew before Air-brakes are faulty or such Impact Crash-landing will occur.
In fact I dont see Brake-chute coming out , also raises question suppose aircraft was loaded with missile and Guided bombs , how much safer they would be in case of fire.
Well one Pakistani Pilot was burned alive when his jet went on fire on ground.No body could saved him because there was live ammo on it so nobody could go close (The ammo could blow up anytime) and the jet at that time did not have zero-zero ejection seat.
 
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☪☪☪☪;910262 said:
Why didnt the guy pull out earlier?Was he scared of ejection..it was pretty close call.Few more seconds and he would have been in flames.

lol he wanted to test if the zero-zero ejection works on zero altitude or not!?
 
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☪☪☪☪;910262 said:
Why didnt the guy pull out earlier?Was he scared of ejection..it was pretty close call.Few more seconds and he would have been in flames.

I think the impact on the ground would have made him all dizzy for a while. He took some time to get into his senses and then pulled out.
 
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May 14: A British Harrier GR9 jet crashed in Afghanistan the Ministry of Defence said. The pilot is believed to have suffered only minor injuries when he ejected from the aircraft before it came down at Kandahar airfield at about 10:30am local time. It is believed there were no other casualties. It is thought that the RAF pilot ejected after the Harrier's undercarriage failed to lower as it came in to land.

Later on reports stated there was some engine problem which happened when the aircraft took off. You can clearly see the fully loaded hard points, most probably with Laser Guided PGMs and fuel tanks.
 
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wellll i also think the pilot might got stun that what happened to jet it suppode to be landing it might took his time might be the case tooo
 
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yes harriers always beeen siting duck against most of fighter jets they only good against ground and ships targets
 
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