Un Tu-22M3 s'est crashé il y a deux jours vers 23 heures...les quatres membres sont morts...
Condoleances aux familles.
Crash d'un Tu-22M3
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Topic author - Pilote Philanthrope
- Messages : 3643
- Inscription : 03 août 2001
#1
Core I7 920 @ 3,8ghz
Asus P6T6 WS Revolution
6 Go OCZ 1600 DDR3
CrossFire Radeon 4850 1go
Windows 7 RC 64 bits
"Un badaud, c'est un passant qui flâne. Au Bourget, ce sont des passants qui payent. Nuance."
Copyright Aquila 2009.
Asus P6T6 WS Revolution
6 Go OCZ 1600 DDR3
CrossFire Radeon 4850 1go
Windows 7 RC 64 bits
"Un badaud, c'est un passant qui flâne. Au Bourget, ce sont des passants qui payent. Nuance."
Copyright Aquila 2009.
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- Jeune Pilote
- Messages : 1340
- Inscription : 07 janvier 2003
#2
http://www.aerospacemedia.com/afp.htm
Four killed in military plane crash in Russia ignored eject order
MOSCOW, July 9 (AFP) - Four crew killed in the crash of a Russian military aircraft in the northwest of the country ignored an order to eject from their plane to safety, a military source told the Interfax news agency Friday.
We knew that the plane was preparing to land "when some 14 kilometres (eight miles) from the runway the lights went out and the plane began to lose control," the source from the committee probing the crash said.
"The flight controllers gave the crew orders to eject, but the pilots did not obey for unknown reasons," Interfax said.
The remains of the four crew members of the Tu-22M3 long-range bomber, which was on a training flight, were found near the Saltsy aerodrome in the Novgorod region. The aircraft hit the ground at a 90 degree angle and exploded on impact.
Whether the cause of the crash was due to pilot error or technical problems is not yet known. "The causes of this catastrophe will not be known until the black boxes have been deciphered," the source said.
Four killed in military plane crash in Russia ignored eject order
MOSCOW, July 9 (AFP) - Four crew killed in the crash of a Russian military aircraft in the northwest of the country ignored an order to eject from their plane to safety, a military source told the Interfax news agency Friday.
We knew that the plane was preparing to land "when some 14 kilometres (eight miles) from the runway the lights went out and the plane began to lose control," the source from the committee probing the crash said.
"The flight controllers gave the crew orders to eject, but the pilots did not obey for unknown reasons," Interfax said.
The remains of the four crew members of the Tu-22M3 long-range bomber, which was on a training flight, were found near the Saltsy aerodrome in the Novgorod region. The aircraft hit the ground at a 90 degree angle and exploded on impact.
Whether the cause of the crash was due to pilot error or technical problems is not yet known. "The causes of this catastrophe will not be known until the black boxes have been deciphered," the source said.
#3
moche... très moche... :(
Resistance is futile, you will be assimilated... and we have a plan! Hasta la vista, Baby!
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- Pilote Confirmé
- Messages : 2779
- Inscription : 12 mars 2004
#4
C'est une malheureuse confirmation d'une réalité bien connue: les pilotes russes sont mal entrainés (trop peu d'heure de vol chaque mois), et la maintenance des avions est plus que difficille (manque de pièces détachées).