Blue Angels F/A-18 Down During Airshow Performance In South Carolina | Aero-News Network
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Sun, Apr 22, 2007

Blue Angels F/A-18 Down During Airshow Performance In South Carolina

Officials Have Not Released Name Of Pilot Killed In Accident

ANN REALTIME UPDATE 04.22.07 0950 EDT: Video captured by a witness to Saturday's fatal crash of a Blue Angels F/A-18 fighter appears to show the aircraft descending while executed a tight left turn to rejoin the Blues' signature diamond formation following a starburst maneuver.

The aircraft continued its descent below a treeline, and impacted a neighborhood three miles from the field. At least eight people on the ground were injured.

Navy officials have not officially released the name of the pilot, who was flying the #6 aircraft.

ANN will continue to follow this story and report as more details are made available.

Original Reports

04.21.07 2300 EDT: Reports from the scene of this afternoon's crash of a Blue Angels F/A-18 Hornet in South Carolina state as many as eight people were injured on the ground when the fighter jet impacted a neighborhood about three miles from Marine Air Corps Station Beaumont.

Military officials have not released the name of the pilot lost in the accident. The Blue Angels website states the #6 aircraft, which flies opposing solo, is normally piloted by Lt. Cmdr. Kevin Davis, 32, of Pittsfield, MA.

At least one home caught fire after being hit by flaming wreckage from the aircraft. Small pieces of the F/A-18 were spread throughout the neighborhood.

Aero-News stresses all information remains preliminary, and subject to change.

2005 EDT: The following is the official release from the US Navy regarding Saturday afternoon's loss of a Blue Angels F/A-18 during a performance in South Carolina:

An F/A-18A Hornet assigned to the Navy Flight Demonstration Squadron (Blue Angels) crashed during the final minutes of an air show at Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort, SC at approximately 4 pm. EDT, April 21.

The pilot did not survive.

The pilot of the jet was joining the Delta formation for the final maneuver of the aerial demonstration when the mishap occurred. It was his second year on the team, and first year as a demonstration pilot.

The other five Blue Angel jets were not involved in the incident and landed safely moments later.

The crash occurred approximately three miles outside the air station in the vicinity of Pine Grove Rd. and White Pine Rd. One civilian on the ground reported minor injuries and was transported to Beaufort Memorial Hospital. Some houses in the area received damage, the extent of which is unclear at this time.

The name of the pilot is being withheld pending the notification of the next-of-kin.

1725 EDT: Fox News quotes local news sources as reporting Blue Angels #6 is the plane that crashed approximately one hour ago during a performance at MCAS Beaufort, South Carolina.

An eyewitness states the accident aircraft was part of a flight-of-six, and lagged behind the others in the group shortly before it descended and impacted terrain.

Original Report:

1720 EDT: The Beaufort Gazette reports emergency crews have called for a coroner to the scene of this afternoon's crash of a Blue Angels F/A-18. The unidentified pilot of the accident aircraft is believed dead.

Preliminary reports indicate the aircraft spread a debris trail approximately 300 yards... suggesting the possibility of a shallow, high-speed descent.

1700 EDT: CNN reports a US Navy Blue Angels F/A-18 fighter has crashed at an airshow in Beaufort, SC. The fate of the pilot is not known.

The precision flying team was performing at a show at Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort. Several nearby house fires were reportedly ignited by the wreckage of the fighter.

Witness Gerald Popp told CNN the crash occurred about 30 minutes after the Blues began their performance at the show. Popp, who said he was watched the performance from his home, reports the accident aircraft was part of a flight of six.

Another eyewitness told Fox News the team had just performed its "starburst" maneuver (shown below) when the accident plane disappeared below a tree line. Witnesses add two Blue Angels jets circled the accident site immediately after the accident.

The Blue Angels are scheduled to fly 66 air shows at 35 air show sites in the United States during the 2007 season, as the team celebrates 20 years of flying the F/A-18 Hornet. Last season, more than 15 million spectators watched the Blue Angels perform. Since its inception in 1946, the Blue Angels have performed for more than 427 million fans.

USN Blue Angel FA-18

 

Prime contractor Boeing
Principal Airframe Contractor Northrop Corporation
Powerplant Two General Electric F404-GE-400 low-bypass, turbofan engines; each in the 16K-pound thrust class
Radar Hughes APG-65 with long-range detection in both head-on and tail-on aspects
Length
56 feet
Height
15.3 feet
Wingspan 40.4 feet (with armament)
Wing area 400 square feet
Speed Mach 1.7+ (1,200 mph)
First Flight November 1978
Crew One (two in two-seat trainer version)
Combat Radius 500-plus nautical miles
Combat Ceiling 50K feet (approx.)
Fuel 11K lbs. internal, 16K lbs. w/external tanks (approx.)
Max T/O Weight 56K lbs. (approx.) fighter escort missions
Cost Approximately $18 million


Aero-News will have more information as it becomes available.

FMI: www.blueangels.navy.mil

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