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thedrifter
11-30-06, 06:36 PM
November 30, 2006

Pilot safe after Hornet crashes at Miramar

By Gidget Fuentes
Staff writer

SAN DIEGO — A pilot was safe Thursday after he ejected from an F/A-18D Hornet fighter jet over Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, officials said.

The pilot, whose name was not released, ejected from the two-seat jet before it crashed about 12:15 p.m. into a brushy area three miles east of the Miramar flight line, an air station spokesman said. No buildings or homes were affected.

The pilot was taken to Scripps Memorial Hospital in nearby La Jolla, where the officer was being treated for what Maj. Jason Johnston, an air station spokesman, described as “just bumps, bruises.”

The jet belongs to the “Sharpshooters” of Marine Fighter Attack Training Squadron 101, one of three joint Marine-Navy squadrons that train aircrews on the Hornet. The pilot was flying the twin-seat “Delta” model solo, although it was not clear why. The twin-seat jet typically is used by the squadron as a trainer to instruct student pilots, although the Corps also flies operational versions of the Delta model with a glass digital cockpit, forward-looking infrared radar and advanced communications and navigation systems.

The crash happened on a clear day in an area east of Interstate 15 known as East Miramar. It started a small brushfire, but firefighters were able to extinguish it quickly, officials said.

The cause of the crash is under investigation, Johnston said.

Ellie

thedrifter
12-01-06, 05:05 AM
Marine jet crashes; pilot OK
Past incidents point to training error or poor aircraft upkeep as possible causes

By Rick Rogers

December 1, 2006

The pilot of a single-seat jet fighter that crashed at Miramar Marine Corps Air Station yesterday escaped with some cuts and bruises, base officials said.

He ejected shortly before his $40 million F/A-18 Hornet burst into flames about 3 miles east of the Miramar air field. He was found near the wreckage and taken back to base headquarters in an ambulance.

“The pilot is safe,” said Maj. Jason Johnston, a Miramar spokesman. Johnston declined to identify the pilot, except to say that he was from VMFAT-101, a Marine fighter-attack training squadron.

The crash, which occurred at about 12:20 p.m., caused a small brush fire near Rue Chantemar, south of Pomerado Road and on base property, said Maurice Luque, a spokesman for the San Diego Fire Department. The flames were extinguished shortly afterward.

Several witnesses said the aircraft came to rest in an open field on the base less than a mile from part of Scripps Ranch, a sprawling housing development known for its high number of families.

Marine officials said they had launched an investigation and wouldn't speculate on causes of the crash until it was completed. Such probes can last a year or longer.

Based on past cases, some aviation observers said, it might be a training error or poor maintenance of the jet.

“The bad news is that because of the (war) missions in Iraq and Afghanistan, a lot of equipment is overdue for maintenance and repair,” said Winslow Wheeler at the Center for Defense Information in Washington, D.C. The nonpartisan think-tank does not accept money from defense companies or advocate policy positions.

“That plane probably has a maintenance record, and it would be interesting to know the last time it had its engines replaced or if repair work on it had been deferred,” Winslow said.

The F/A-18 Hornet is a supersonic, all-weather attack aircraft that can operate from land bases or aircraft carriers. A staple in the Navy and Marine Corps, it can perform a variety of roles: air superiority, fighter escort, suppression of enemy air defenses, reconnaissance, forward air control, close and deep air support, and day and night strike missions.

For at least a year now, the Marine Corps has done a good job in holding the line against aircraft accidents.

But in 2004, it suffered its most accident-prone year since 1990, prompting former Marine Commandant Gen. Mike Hagee to issue a safety message that said: “We are currently taking significant losses from a self-inflicted internal threat: noncombat mishaps. Our peacetime training mistakes are significantly degrading our ability to prosecute the global war on terrorism.”

During one stretch of that year, 15 fighter-jet crashes killed 15 Marines. Eight of those accidents and 10 of those deaths involved aircraft based at the Miramar base.

The deadliest accidents happened during training missions.

In January 2004, a UH-1N Huey helicopter crashed on Camp Pendleton, killing all four Marines on board.

Two months later, a UC-35 Cessna Citation built for the military crashed on approach to Miramar. Four Marines died in the incident.

In July 2004, two F/A-18 fighters based at Miramar collided over Oregon, killing the pilots of both planes.

Human error was suspected in a number of those crashes, although the Marines Corps has not publicized its final rulings in any of the cases.

Not everyone believes human error was to blame. Marcus Corbin, a senior analyst for the Center for Defense Information, said in 2004 that the main problem likely rested with the aircraft.

“The (military) leadership is buying stuff that is unreliable and is too complex,” he said. “And the reason there are more accidents during training missions in the United States, as opposed to overseas in combat, is because you send your best stuff to war and you make sure it is all working.”

Rick Rogers: (760) 476-8212; rick.rogers@uniontrib.com

Ellie

thedrifter
12-02-06, 07:48 AM
Pilot identified in military jet crash

By: Associated Press -

SAN DIEGO ---- A pilot who safely ejected from an F-18 Hornet fighter jet moments before it crashed at Miramar Marine Corps Air Station was identified Friday by military officials.

Capt. Jonathan C. Ashmore, 27, of Oakland, Mich., ejected Thursday about three miles from the Marine base airfield, according to Miramar spokesman Maj. Jason Johnston. He was on a final approach for landing at the base.

Johnston said Ashmore was a "pilot under instruction," which means he had completed flight school but was still learning how to operate the F-18.

Ashmore was the sole occupant of the two-seat plane. He was found near the wreckage of the jet, which crashed in an unpopulated, hilly area of the base.

Ashmore suffered only minor injuries.

The experience of ejecting from a fighter jet is "very traumatic," Johnston said.

The cause of the crash is still under investigation.