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Document title: F-16 Accidents & Mishaps for the United States Air Force - F-16.net - The Ultimate F-16 Reference
Original URL: http://www.f-16.net/aircraft-database/F-16/mishaps-and-accidents/airforce/USAF/31
Printed on: 18 November 2008
F-16 Accidents & Mishaps for the United States Air Force

F-16 Aircraft Database

F-16 Accidents & Mishaps for the United States Air Force







Found 419 aircraft, displaying 31-45 [Sorted by Date]
Date Status Local S/N Aircraft AF/Unit Version Info Details
08 Nov 1982 [w/o] 79298 79-0298 USAF 63 TFTS F-16A Block 10 Details
Crashed in Avon Park range, Florida during a night training mission killing Captain Francisco Pineiro, Jr. He was a flight instructor.
20 May 1982 [w/o] 79301 79-0301 USAF 421 TFS F-16A Block 10 Details
Hit the ground at Great Salt Lake, Utah killing Major Richard Olson
29 Jun 1981 [w/o] 79313 79-0313 USAF 388 TFW F-16A Block 10 Details
Went down in Great Salt Lake , Utah.
10 Apr 1984 [w/o] 79315 79-0315 USAF 157 TFS F-16A Block 10 Details
Crashed near McEntire ANGB, South Carolina killing the pilot, Lieutenant Colonel Yeadon D. Dorn.
10 Apr 1981 [w/o] 79316 79-0316 USAF 421 TFS F-16A Block 10 Details
At 1:09 local time the main generator warning light came on and the EPU started. The pilot Major John Cary who was part of a four ship flight advised of his emergency and tried to make it to Buckley ANGB. After flying in for five minutes on the EPU, that failed and flight controls were lost. Major Cary ejected at 1000 feet with a 90 degree nose down near Elizabeth, Colorado. Injuries were sore neck, chipped tooth and swollen eye which resulted in temporary blindness. This was caused by the high negative G's the aircraft pulled (-6G during a pitch down). The reason for the failure was due to an EPU overspeed which caused an over voltage to the flight control computer causing it to shut down.
27 Jan 1982 [w/o] 79318 79-0318 USAF 16 TFTS F-16A Block 10 Details
Crashed into an unpopulated area Southwest of Luke AFB, Arizona. Cause of crash was flight control failure, pilot ejected safely.
07 Feb 1985 [w/o] 79323 79-0323 USAF 157 TFS F-16A Block 10 Details
Hit the ground on the Townsend Bombing Range, Georgia
09 Sep 1988 [w/o] 79338 79-0338 USAF 72 TFTS F-16A Block 10 Details
Crashed off the coast of Sarasota, Florida into the Gulf of Mexico. May have been marked 72nd TFTS at the time.
27 Dec 1982 [w/o] 79343 79-0343 USAF 474 TFW F-16A Block 10 Details
The crash occured somewhere over the Nevada desert.
18 Nov 1983 [w/o] 79350 79-0350 USAF 474 TFW F-16A Block 10 Details
11 Mar 1986 [w/o] 79367 79-0367 USAF 474 TFW F-16A Block 10 Details
Destroyed after a mid-air collision.
30 Jul 1985 [w/o] 79372 79-0372 USAF 72 TFTS F-16A Block 10 Details
Crashed into the Gulf of Mexico killing the pilot, 2nd Lieutenant J. O'brien. Probable cause is believed to be black-out
20 May 1982 [w/o] 79374 79-0374 USAF 428 TFS F-16A Block 10 Details
Crashed on the Ugway range, Utah. During an exercises it suffered a main generator failure. After a sucessful airstart and while enroute to NAS China Lake for an emergency landing an intermittant flame was observed coming from the tailpipe. Upon hearing a loud bang and feeling a reduction of thrust, the pilot successfully ejected.
Unknown [act] 79377 79-0377 USAF 429 TFS F-16A Block 10 Details
Sometimes when aircraft systems designers integrate various components into an airframe they forget to examine what happens if a component should fail. Such was the case in the original F-16 design. An electrical connector (cannon plug) came loose on an F-16 and unfortunately the wiring for some similar critical components all went through the same connector. Brakes, arrestor hook, etc. After this accident they changed the electrical schematic and wiring harness so that those features went through different connectors now. Pilot attempted to land the aircaft and engage the arrestor wires. Both wires were missed and the aircraft went off the end of the runway. Pilot stayed with the aircraft and the rescue crews had to cut through the canopy to reach the pilot. Hole in canopy can be seen in the photo.
Unknown [act] 79377 79-0377 USAF 63 TFTS F-16A Block 10 Details
Aircraft crashed for the second time and was rebuilt again, and was called "Twice as Nice" from then on. Cause of mishap was a stuck throttle cable at 70% power. Incident happened at MacDill and the pilot landed the aircraft then ejected when he couldn't stop it. It then went off the end of the runway.

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Abbreviations and symbols:
[act] Active [msh] Involved in Mishap [sto] Stored (e.g. at AMARC)
[cld] Cancelled order [o/o] On Order T/V LM Aero Type/Version (Construction) number
[emb] Embargoed [pre] Preserved (museum, gateguard) [w/o] Write-off
[i/a] Instructional Airframe [scr] Scrapped Photo Available



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