Apparently one of the Blue Angels just crashed in a neighborhood during one of their shows.
Recent headlines: A member of the U.S. Navy's Blue Angels precision flight team has crashed during an air show in Beaufort, South Carolina, witnesses tell CNN. Report: Blue Angels plane down on Pine Grove Road in Beaufort, South Carolina Aircraft down in a Beaufort neighborhood Report: Several houses on fire as result of Blue Angels crash
1 confirmed dead? i was about to say it's the pilot, but i'm starting to lean more towards some unlucky guy watching tv...
this week's sucked so far.
ASPARTAME: in your diet soda and artificial sweeteners. also, it's obviously completely safe. it's not like it will cause tumors or anything. >.>
always remember: guilty until proven innocent
Though I have to say - and I know I'm going to sound like a dick for doing so, but bear with me - at least he wasn't flying an old warbird. I hate it even more when it's an already rare plane that goes down, at least they can just get another F/A-18 at the drop of a hat. Losing a pilot is terrible, losing a pilot and a beautiful piece of history is just plain rock-bottom.
Yes, but as a US military show team that's an expense that they don't really have to worry about; and it's only a monetary expense. When a warbird goes down, it's a cost measured in preservation of history, not currency.
I fail to see what relevance this has to the crash yesterday. Nothing was stated about the plane, really. The focus of the discussion is the death of the pilot and the fact that it crashed in a residential area.
I brought the point up as the previous few fatal airshow accidents I'd heard of involved antique aircraft.
At least nobody on the ground was killed, but it's a shame about the pilot. He probably didn't even realise until it was too late, especially given the fact he was at such a low altitude