Hasty Briefsbeta

F-35 pilot held 50-minute airborne conference call with engineers before crash

14 days ago
  • #aviation safety
  • #F-35 crash
  • #hydraulic failure
  • A US Air Force F-35 pilot spent 50 minutes on a conference call with Lockheed Martin engineers before ejecting due to a landing gear issue.
  • The crash was caused by ice in the hydraulic lines of the F-35's nose and main landing gears, preventing proper deployment.
  • The pilot attempted 'touch and go' landings to fix the jammed nose gear, but the landing gears froze, leading to an uncontrollable situation.
  • The F-35's sensors mistakenly indicated the jet was on the ground, switching to 'automated ground-operation mode' while airborne.
  • Inspection revealed water contamination in the hydraulic systems, which should have had no water.
  • A similar hydraulic icing issue was found in another F-35 at the same base nine days later, but that jet landed safely.
  • Lockheed Martin had issued guidance on cold-weather sensor issues nine months before the crash, but it wasn't referenced during the incident.
  • Contributing factors included crew decision-making, lack of oversight in the hazardous material program, and improper hydraulics servicing procedures.