Air Force Lt. Gen. Christopher Bogdan, the F-35 program executive officer, told reporters Monday at the program’s offices in Arlington, Virginia, that the Oct. 27 mishap occurred when a bracket that held electrical wires in the weapons bay came loose, allowing the wires to chafe and come into contact with hydraulic lines, causing the fire.Ok, so we learn that the F-35 program office and the Deputy Commandant for Aviation knew about the danger of a weapons bay fire with the F-35.
Military.com broke the news about the fire, which caused at least $2 million in damage, according to Naval Safety Center estimates. An F-35B from Marine Fighter Attack Training Squadron 501, a 20-plane fleet replacement squadron for the Marine Corps based in Beaufort, South Carolina, was involved in the mishap.
“The good news is, we knew what it was,” Bogdan said. “When knew about this problem long before that, and all of our airplanes were being retrofitted with a new bracket.”
The F-35B that caught fire had not yet received the replacement bracket, he said, but had been inspected as part of a stopgap regiment designed to prevent mishaps. Prior to the flight, Bogdan said, the bracket had seemed to be holding.
“We inspected, it looked fine, and it just didn’t look fine in the air,” he said.
Instead of grounding the aircraft till the fixes were fielded he instead went full speed ahead? Check this part out...
In the wake of the fire, the Marine Corps opted not to ground any aircraft or pause flight operations. Officials did, however, update the inspection regimen to make assessment of the faulty brackets more rigorous, Bogdan said.So the head of Marine Aviation was aware that he was ordering Marines to fly airplanes where there was a risk of weapons bay fire. Additionally instead of pushing for a faster replacement of the bracket he instead pushed for increased inspection ... after it was demonstrated that the previous inspection regimen failed?
Bogdan acknowledged it was a risk to fly the F-35Bs that had not yet received the bracket retrofit, but said it was one of many risks that come with operating the aircraft.
“Military airplanes all have risk,” he said. “This plane is like no other and yes, there are acknowledged risks, and that would be one of them. Until we fix that bracket, every airplane of the B-model that doesn’t have that bracket is going to have to be inspected, and hopefully that bracket remains in place when it’s flying.”
It’s not yet clear when the retrofit process will be complete or how many aircraft still need the new equipment.
This guy is a danger to the Marines that he commands. He is ordering pilots to fly aircraft that HAVE DEMONSTRATED that they're unsafe, he refuses to order a safety stand down till the problem is corrected and the SON OF BITCH STILL HAS HIS JOB!
Marine Air has a problem and that problem is named General Davis, Deputy Commandant for Aviation.
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