Any truth in the Belgian F-16 story?
Any truth in the Belgian F-16 story?
Author
Discussion

Tony1963

Original Poster:

5,808 posts

186 months

Friday 12th October 2018
quotequote all
Tech working on aircraft, loaded gun fires, hits another F-16 which explodes, two more aircraft damaged by explosion.

lol

IanH755

2,642 posts

144 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
There would have to have been a HUGE amount go wrong for it to happen, including quite a few deliberate actions by the maintenance crew, for this to happen but it is possible. I did 20+ years as a RAF engineer working fast jets etc so I have some experience on aircraft weapon safety plus I looked up a few M61A1 cannon specifics online but just to give you an idea of how much safety is involved -

  • The gun has a physical pin which needs removing before the gun can fire. This physical item locks the breach (stops it loading) and breaks the electrical firing circuit.
  • The gun is electrically fired so it has an electrical plug which is disconnected on the ground preventing accidental firing and the gun is RF protected so stray RF energy can't set off any rounds.
  • The gun breach is loaded by a hydraulic system which spins the loading mechanism. This system is isolated on the ground to prevent accidental loading.
  • The SMS (stores management system) is a computer which controls all weapons. This prevents firing on the ground and can only be over-ridden using physical tools, normally used for testing the System.
  • There are Two separate switches which control the arming of any weapons system, a third separate switch which "powers" the gun and a fourth separate switch which actually fires the gun - all of these need moved PLUS the SMS above placed in testing mode with physical tools and all 3 safety devices removed before the gun can be fired on the ground.
  • Any aircraft having maintenance done to the weapons system has to have ALL ordinance, including canon shells, removed before ANY testing can be carried out and a physical check of the aircraft weapon systems carried out by the engineers before work starts.
  • Any aircraft having general maintenance done MUST have all the weapons safety equipment fitted before anyone can work on the aircraft (pins fitted, plugs removed etc), again checked by the guys working on it.
  • Any aircraft with live "forward firing" ordinance MUST be pointed away from any other aircraft or structure, usually on specially designated parking bays which are mapped out to avoid hitting anything should something go wrong.
So while it's possible to fire the gun on the ground, you can see that it is deliberately made as difficult as humanly possible with multiple points of physical safety required to be over-ridden for it to happen.

The only way I could see it happening in the way described (tech on A/C and loaded gun fires and hits another plane) is if the aircraft was undergoing weapons testing but someone forgot to check the "magazine" was empty before which would a massive failing on the engineers and the managements part. Alternatively, as the rounds themselves are electrically fired, a round still in the magazine and NOT in the gun fired for some reason once power was applied, even though the magazine is shielded against an stray electrical inputs.

Edited by IanH755 on Saturday 13th October 06:30

Tony1963

Original Poster:

5,808 posts

186 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
Yes, I know most of that (on mostly military aircraft since 1981) but I'm asking if there's any truth in the story.

IanH755

2,642 posts

144 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
Fair enough. I've only seen it reported on a few websites so far and all seem to be running the exact same story from a single "un-named" source so how accurate that is is anyones guess biggrin

Tony1963

Original Poster:

5,808 posts

186 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
Very inaccurate usually.

Scrump

23,781 posts

182 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
kapiteinlangzaam said:
All sounds very Belgian to me.
A load of waffle.

Eric Mc

124,944 posts

289 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
We need a Poirot to get to the bottom of this.

Elroy Blue

8,826 posts

216 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
Live sidewinders were fired film a Harrier undergoing maintenance in the Falklands years back. I think some personnel were killed. So it happens despite precautions

RichGault

132 posts

145 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
Texted my Dad about this.His thoughts immediately went to an incident at Leuchers when an F4 accidently fired off a Sidewinder whilst on the ground.....ended up bouncing over the airfield into a river.....

Someone on here I'm sure will be able to fill in some details.....

anonymous-user

78 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
IanH755 said:
There would have to have been a HUGE amount go wrong for it to happen, including quite a few deliberate actions by the maintenance crew, for this to happen but it is possible. I did 20+ years as a RAF engineer working fast jets etc so I have some experience on aircraft weapon safety plus I looked up a few M61A1 cannon specifics online but just to give you an idea of how much safety is involved -

  • The gun has a physical pin which needs removing before the gun can fire. This physical item locks the breach (stops it loading) and breaks the electrical firing circuit.
  • The gun is electrically fired so it has an electrical plug which is disconnected on the ground preventing accidental firing and the gun is RF protected so stray RF energy can't set off any rounds.
  • The gun breach is loaded by a hydraulic system which spins the loading mechanism. This system is isolated on the ground to prevent accidental loading.
  • The SMS (stores management system) is a computer which controls all weapons. This prevents firing on the ground and can only be over-ridden using physical tools, normally used for testing the System.
  • There are Two separate switches which control the arming of any weapons system, a third separate switch which "powers" the gun and a fourth separate switch which actually fires the gun - all of these need moved PLUS the SMS above placed in testing mode with physical tools and all 3 safety devices removed before the gun can be fired on the ground.
  • Any aircraft having maintenance done to the weapons system has to have ALL ordinance, including canon shells, removed before ANY testing can be carried out and a physical check of the aircraft weapon systems carried out by the engineers before work starts.
  • Any aircraft having general maintenance done MUST have all the weapons safety equipment fitted before anyone can work on the aircraft (pins fitted, plugs removed etc), again checked by the guys working on it.
  • Any aircraft with live "forward firing" ordinance MUST be pointed away from any other aircraft or structure, usually on specially designated parking bays which are mapped out to avoid hitting anything should something go wrong.
So while it's possible to fire the gun on the ground, you can see that it is deliberately made as difficult as humanly possible with multiple points of physical safety required to be over-ridden for it to happen.

The only way I could see it happening in the way described (tech on A/C and loaded gun fires and hits another plane) is if the aircraft was undergoing weapons testing but someone forgot to check the "magazine" was empty before which would a massive failing on the engineers and the managements part. Alternatively, as the rounds themselves are electrically fired, a round still in the magazine and NOT in the gun fired for some reason once power was applied, even though the magazine is shielded against an stray electrical inputs.

Edited by IanH755 on Saturday 13th October 06:30
Thanks for an informative post. I’m now wondering how the gun ever actually fires in a combat situation what with all the plugs and pins and switches and computers that have got to be in or out off or on up or down etc

anonymous-user

78 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
Elroy Blue said:
Live sidewinders were fired film a Harrier undergoing maintenance in the Falklands years back. I think some personnel were killed. So it happens despite precautions
I dare say in a combat situation it’s about turning the aircraft around quickly and some procedures may get ignored. Only guessing. Dare say there is some board of inquiry report on it somewhere.

IanH755

2,642 posts

144 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
MikeStroud said:
Thanks for an informative post. I’m now wondering how the gun ever actually fires in a combat situation what with all the plugs and pins and switches and computers that have got to be in or out off or on up or down etc
biggrin

Happily the weapons system is designed to very easy to use once flying, it's only the ground where there's eleventy billion safety bits. In the air there's just the 4 cockpit switches before you are live.

What usually happens on the ground is that most of the safety parts are removed/connected etc when the pilot arrives with the Pilot removing the pins themselves as the plane is now their responsibility and a few final safety bits are removed at the end of the runway just before take-off by a separate safety crew.

LimaDelta

7,950 posts

242 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
It has happened with rockets too. The 1967 fire on the USS Forrestal is one of the reasons the USN no longer operate their a/c with rocket pods.

MB140

4,841 posts

127 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
IanH755 said:
There would have to have been a HUGE amount go wrong for it to happen, including quite a few deliberate actions by the maintenance crew, for this to happen but it is possible. I did 20+ years as a RAF engineer working fast jets etc so I have some experience on aircraft weapon safety plus I looked up a few M61A1 cannon specifics online but just to give you an idea of how much safety is involved -

  • The gun has a physical pin which needs removing before the gun can fire. This physical item locks the breach (stops it loading) and breaks the electrical firing circuit.
  • The gun is electrically fired so it has an electrical plug which is disconnected on the ground preventing accidental firing and the gun is RF protected so stray RF energy can't set off any rounds.
  • The gun breach is loaded by a hydraulic system which spins the loading mechanism. This system is isolated on the ground to prevent accidental loading.
  • The SMS (stores management system) is a computer which controls all weapons. This prevents firing on the ground and can only be over-ridden using physical tools, normally used for testing the System.
  • There are Two separate switches which control the arming of any weapons system, a third separate switch which "powers" the gun and a fourth separate switch which actually fires the gun - all of these need moved PLUS the SMS above placed in testing mode with physical tools and all 3 safety devices removed before the gun can be fired on the ground.
  • Any aircraft having maintenance done to the weapons system has to have ALL ordinance, including canon shells, removed before ANY testing can be carried out and a physical check of the aircraft weapon systems carried out by the engineers before work starts.
  • Any aircraft having general maintenance done MUST have all the weapons safety equipment fitted before anyone can work on the aircraft (pins fitted, plugs removed etc), again checked by the guys working on it.
  • Any aircraft with live "forward firing" ordinance MUST be pointed away from any other aircraft or structure, usually on specially designated parking bays which are mapped out to avoid hitting anything should something go wrong.
So while it's possible to fire the gun on the ground, you can see that it is deliberately made as difficult as humanly possible with multiple points of physical safety required to be over-ridden for it to happen.

The only way I could see it happening in the way described (tech on A/C and loaded gun fires and hits another plane) is if the aircraft was undergoing weapons testing but someone forgot to check the "magazine" was empty before which would a massive failing on the engineers and the managements part. Alternatively, as the rounds themselves are electrically fired, a round still in the magazine and NOT in the gun fired for some reason once power was applied, even though the magazine is shielded against an stray electrical inputs.

Edited by IanH755 on Saturday 13th October 06:30
Used to work Tornado Gr1/4. Pretty much spot on from my experience of working around armed aircraft.

The last point about all armed aircraft pointing to safe area is the final point.

No way this happened. Unless it was on purpose.

FourWheelDrift

91,927 posts

308 months

Eric Mc

124,944 posts

289 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
A major disaster was caused to the USS Forrestal during the Vietnam War when a missile was launched by an aircraft on the carrier deck.




Mistakes happen.

MB140

4,841 posts

127 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
A major disaster was caused to the USS Forrestal during the Vietnam War when a missile was launched by an aircraft on the carrier deck.




Mistakes happen.
True very true, thankfully safety has improved and as someone mentioned earlier “in war the rule book often goes out the window”, what we can do in theatre at war and what we can do at home base is fastly different.



Eric Mc

124,944 posts

289 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
Mistakes still happen.

You can have all the procedures you like and still things that shouldn't happen, happen.

Look what happened with that poor Red Arrows pilot and his ejector seat.

Tony1963

Original Poster:

5,808 posts

186 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
Look what happened with that poor Red Arrows pilot and his ejector seat.
I'm afraid that was almost bound to happen, just as the BAe nav being dropped out of the inverted Tornado from Marham was bound to happen.

The British forces seem to want to live in their own little bubble, believing they're a cut above the rest with aircraft maintenance.

They're not.

And the bubble is being perpetuated by the MAA (set up in response to the criminal Nimrod incident) being manned by chums of serving aircrews and engineers.

What will it take, ffs?

Eric Mc

124,944 posts

289 months

Saturday 13th October 2018
quotequote all
The point I'm making is that all the safety procedures in the world come to naught if people become complacent and sloppy.