What's new

Notify PAF Aircraft Crashes

Army Mushshak

Two Crew Killed in Crash of Pakistan Army Mushshak

Posted on 9 February, 2016

Pakistan Army Mushshak 95-5375 takes off from Quasim on November 17, 2009. One of the Army’s Mushshaks crashed this evening, killing both pilots. AFD-Alan Warnes

BOTH CREW members were killed when a Pakistan Army PAC MFI-17 Mushshak crashed this evening, February 9, near Gujranwala in the Gujrat district of Punjab. The fatalities were identified as instructor pilot Major Azhar and student pilot Captain Ahmed.

The circumstances surrounding the crash, which occurred during a routine training mission, were not immediately clear. AFD-Dave Allport
 

Attachments

  • 1455076795414.jpg
    1455076795414.jpg
    60.6 KB · Views: 0
One Crew Member Killed in Pakistan Army Mi-17 Crash

Posted on 29 February, 2016


Pakistan Army Aviation Corps Mi-172 58628 taxies out at Qasim Army Aviation Base on November 17, 2009. A Pakistan Army Mi-17 crashed today near Tarbela, killing one of the five crew members. AFD-Alan Warnes

A PAKISTAN Army Aviation Corps Mi-17 helicopter crashed today, February 29, following a technical malfunction during a routine night training flight. One crew member, identified as Lt Col Tauqeer, died in the accident.

Four other crew members escaped from the crash, although it was not reported whether any of them had been injured. The helicopter came down near Tarbela, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. AFD-Dave Allport

Posted in News
 

Attachments

  • 1456802564180.jpg
    1456802564180.jpg
    55.8 KB · Views: 0
إِنَّا لِلّهِ وَإِنَّـا إِلَيْهِ رَاجِعونَ
.
They were in the Final stage of the Mission, Coming to Land, air craft developed Some technical Issues, she Initiated ejection Procedure as she was sitting in the rear cockpit, ejection Went fine but Something Happened to her during ejection as she was found unconscious and died during medical Treatment.. S/L Saqib sustained Minor injuries
Ejection seats are qualified to a particular weight category. Anyone below that category is at risk. The position during ejection is also extremely critical. Any mistake during this violent event can cause serious injury, which was the case of this fine young lady. RIP.
 
Ejection seats are qualified to a particular weight category. Anyone below that category is at risk. The position during ejection is also extremely critical. Any mistake during this violent event can cause serious injury, which was the case of this fine young lady. RIP.

This is true ie the case of positioning of the seat!. An Indian Piloting a Jaguar was killed while ejecting, the reason was the he adjusting his seat at a dangerous Setting

BUT can u explain the weight? how would this effect in this case - The pilot i assume wasn't heavy ?
 
This is true ie the case of positioning of the seat!. An Indian Piloting a Jaguar was killed while ejecting, the reason was the he adjusting his seat at a dangerous Setting

BUT can u explain the weight? how would this effect in this case - The pilot i assume wasn't heavy ?

Every seat is qualified for Anthrometric data, highest and lowest percentile weight category of a pilot. If the weight category is low or high, it puts the pilot at risk during ejection. However, the most important data is the ejection position. If the pilot has not taken the correct position during ejection, the Gs (16-20) can easily put strain on the spinal column specifically the neck, since the pilot is wearing a helmet. When the helmet starts weighing 16 to 20 kilos, it can cause serious injury, leading to death.
 
A Pakistan Air Force (PAF) fighter jet F7-PG crashed in Jamrud, Khyber Agency, officials said on Saturday.




According to initial reports, the pilots were not hurt in the incident. Officials claim the aircraft crashed due to a technical fault.

http://tribune.com.pk/story/1187587/paf-fighter-jet-crashes-khyber-agency/

PG?
And These Birds are meant to fly beyond 2020.
Good to know pilot is safe . :rolleyes:

What do you expect from antique mig-21s and mirages from the 70s.

These are new air frames, inducted in 2002.
 
Last edited:
Uffff....PAF... Already i have a strange gut feeling and after tht its surely not a good omen to read such news :( ..... Number of crashes have been many...in the last few years.

But thankGod the pilot is safe
 
And how do you of these were the PG versions or the same old shyt?

By source itself.


A Pakistan Air Force (PAF) fighter jet F7-PG crashed in Jamrud, Khyber Agency, officials said on Saturday.

According to initial reports, the pilots were not hurt in the incident. Officials claim the aircraft crashed due to a technical fault.

Last year, a PAF fighter jet F7-PG crashed near Mastung during what officials described as a routine training operation. The pilot managed to eject to safety.

According to a spokesperson for PAF’s Samungli Airbase in Quetta, “The F7-PG fighter jet was on a routine training mission when its engine caught fire and crashed on a fray near Mastung.”

“The pilot, flight lieutenant Yasir, ejected himself from the plane safely while no loss of life and property was reported in the incident,” he added.

Air force officials, Frontier Corps and Levies rushed to spot soon after the crash and cordoned the area.
 

Back
Top Bottom