F-22 Crash
Posted: 26 Mar 2009, 00:30
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123802321736442009.html
F-22 Fighter Jet Crashes on Test Flight in California
By AUGUST COLE
An Air Force F-22 Raptor, the service's most advanced and expensive fighter, crashed Wednesday morning in the desert near Edwards Air Force Base in Southern California, according to the Air Force.
The cause of the crash, and the fate of the pilot, weren't yet known, an Air Force spokeswoman at the Pentagon said.
The plane was on a test flight and went down at 10 a.m. about 35 miles northeast of the base.
It is the second time an F-22 has crashed. In December 2004, an F-22 crashed at Edwards during a test flight, with the pilot safely ejecting, according to the Air Force.
The twin-engine Lockheed Martin Corp.-built jet is generally regarded as the world's dominant fighter because of its maneuverability, speed and advanced electronics systems. It is designed to be able to sneak into another country's airspace and attack other planes, as well as ground targets. The plane's sensors also give it an edge that other fighters lack. Boeing Co. is a major subcontractor. United Technologies Corp.'s Pratt & Whitney makes the plane's engines.
The F-22 became combat-ready for the Air Force at the end of 2007.
Ron
F-22 Fighter Jet Crashes on Test Flight in California
By AUGUST COLE
An Air Force F-22 Raptor, the service's most advanced and expensive fighter, crashed Wednesday morning in the desert near Edwards Air Force Base in Southern California, according to the Air Force.
The cause of the crash, and the fate of the pilot, weren't yet known, an Air Force spokeswoman at the Pentagon said.
The plane was on a test flight and went down at 10 a.m. about 35 miles northeast of the base.
It is the second time an F-22 has crashed. In December 2004, an F-22 crashed at Edwards during a test flight, with the pilot safely ejecting, according to the Air Force.
The twin-engine Lockheed Martin Corp.-built jet is generally regarded as the world's dominant fighter because of its maneuverability, speed and advanced electronics systems. It is designed to be able to sneak into another country's airspace and attack other planes, as well as ground targets. The plane's sensors also give it an edge that other fighters lack. Boeing Co. is a major subcontractor. United Technologies Corp.'s Pratt & Whitney makes the plane's engines.
The F-22 became combat-ready for the Air Force at the end of 2007.
Ron