Today in Aviation History- 55th Anniversary of the day a Plane Shot Itself Down

Sep 21, 2011 19:34

Today marks the 54th anniversary of one of the more bizzare accidents in aviation history, where a Grumman F11F on a test-flight over Long Island Sound overtook 20mm projectiles it had just fired, and suffered damage that led to engine failure. One of those things where truth is stranger than fiction, I suppose...



F11F-1 of VF-21 landing aboard USS Ranger (CV-61) in 1957

From here:

An Unlucky First... The Shootdown of Tiger #620

Near Long Island, NY, 21 September 1956

The Dawn of Aviation's Silver Age...

It was a heady time in aviation... In 1956, it seemed as if every week, speed records were being broken in the quest to be the fastest. Supersonic flight, having been achieved only a decade earlier, wrought new challenges to pilots and designers, but also new perils.

In 1952, the Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation funded a study to possibility of adapting the stock F9F 'Cougar' design with advancements in aerodynamic science, such as adherence to the 'Area Rule', reducing transonic drag and enabling the aircraft to achieve a supersonic performance. By 1953, the resulting aircraft design bore little resemblance to the Cougar, sporting a fully redesigned wing assembly, abandoning the use of ailerons in favor of spoilers to control the roll of the plane, as well as the installation of leading-edge slats to improve low velocity maneuvering, and folding wing for compact storage on naval aircraft carriers. Powered by a Wright J65-W-18 turbojet engine, a British-designed Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire powerplant built under license by Curtiss-Wright Corporation, the airplane was supplied with a surprising 10,500 pounds of afterburner thrust, capable of a speed of just over Mach 1.1 at 35,000 feet.

The plane was equipped with four hardpoints for AIM-9 'Sidewinder' Air-to-Air missiles, and armed with four 20-millimeter Colt Mark-12 cannons, capable of firing 125 rounds per gun.

"Feet Wet!"

On Friday, September 21st, 1956, Grumman test pilot Thomas W. Attridge, 33, took an F11F 'Tiger', Navy Bureau number 138620, on a test flight over the Atlantic Ocean. A former Navy aviator and a father of three, Tom Attridge was used to flights over the water, and this sortie's weapons test, strafing the ocean's surface, was a relatively simple task., and a great way to end the week.

Entering a shallow dive from an altitude of 20,000 feet, he readied to test-fire the Tiger's cannons. Attridge fired a short four-second burst at 13,000 feet, expending about 70 rounds in total. Advancing the engine to afterburners, he paused his fire, and entered into a steeper dive. and fired the cannons again at 7,000 feet to clear the gun belts. Having just finished firing this second four-second burst, the plane rattled. The Tiger had been struck, and Attridge's windshield buckled inward.

Having thought maybe he had hit a bird, a typical hazard when flying over coastal waters, Attridge throttled back the engine to 200 knots, and headed back to the field, the Grumman airbase on the Peconic River, near Calverton, New York.

He reported to the tower at the Long Island facility that he only sign of damage he could observe was damage to the cockpit glass, and a sizeable gash on the outboard side of the right engine's intake lip. More disturbing, however, was that he could get no more than 78 percent of the engine's maximum available power without the engine starting to run rough.
But with only a couple of miles to go, at low altitude and high drag, Attridge concluded that, with his rate of descent, he could not safely reach the airfield. Every time he tried to advance the throttle passed 78 percent, the engine growled its displeasure.

Finally, the engine gave out. A half mile short of the runway, Attridge retracted his Tiger's landing gear, and made a dead-stick crash-landing, ripping through the woods below, shearing his plane's right wing off, and gouging a path of destruction 300 feet long. Fuel ignited, and Attridge, having suffered a broken leg, and three busted vertebrate in the post-impact sequence, scrambled out of the doomed craft. A helicopter dispatched from the Grumman factory, and piloted by Edwin Cartoski, picked up Attridge, and carried him away to receive medical assistance at Central Suffolk Hospital in the nearby town of Riverhead. He later spent two weeks hospitalized.

A "Million-To-One Shot"...
A post-accident investigation discovered that Attridge had hit no bird. Instead, he had overtaken and run down the fire from his own guns. A inert 20-millimeter bullet, typically used in practice, had gone through his windshield. Another round had hit the right engine intake, and a third had punctured the nose. The engine's inlet guide vanes were also struck, and lodged in the first compressor stage of the engine, was found a battered 20mm projectile.

If the projectiles had been explosive, like those used in combat, Attridge would not have likely survived.

According to Rear Admiral William A. Schoech, assistant chief of the Bureau of Aeronautics for Research and Development, the muzzle velocity of the shells was 3,000-feet a second. Their speed through the air (the muzzle velocity plus the airplane's speed) was about 4,300 feet- per-second,

"This would be more than 2,000 miles an hour, but their speed was immediately slowed down, because of air resistance. The plane was traveling about 880 miles an hour, better than 100 miles an hour faster than the speed of sound."

If the airplane had kept its original course, it would have passed by them, but its steepened dive path made it intersect the bullet's down-curving path. When it hit them, they must have been moving so slowly that the airplane overtook them at a good fraction of its own air speed, which was about as fast as many a newly fired bullet

Going Public...

Naval Vice Admiral William V. Davis, deputy chief of naval operations for aviation, told the story of the strange accident at a luncheon talk before the Aviation Writers Association at the National Press Club in Washington, DC, nearly five weeks after the accident. As a result of the accident, the Navy advised pilots of its fast jets to turn off course or pull up after firing their guns, despite claims by them that it was a "million-to-one shot."

But Attridge disagreed. "At the speeds we're flying today, it could be duplicated any time."

On June 20th, 1973, Pete Purvis, a test pilot for Grumman, was flying out of Point Mugu, California, in an F-14 Tomcat, when his plane was hit by its own AIM‑7E 'Sparrow' missile. The missile had pitched up during launch and punctured the plane's fuel tank. After losing control of the aircraft, both Purvis and his systems officer, William Sherman, ejected successfully and survived.

More information:

Wikipedia on the F11F-1 'Tiger'

Official US Navy Standard Aircraft Characteristics Sheet for the 'Tiger' (7/1/1967) [6.1 MB PDF]

naval history, strange but true crap, aviation

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