Home » A USAF F-15 severely damaged after being struck by an AIM-9 fired by another USAF F-15

A USAF F-15 severely damaged after being struck by an AIM-9 fired by another USAF F-15

by Till Daisd
0 comment
USAF-F-15-damaged-by-USAF-F-15

The peculiar image in this post shows a seriously damaged USAF F-15 Eagle from Elmendorf Air Force Base that was unintentionally hit by an AIM-9M Sidewinder missile fired by another USAF F-15

The unusual photo in this post shows a US Air Force (USAF) F-15 Eagle from Elmendorf Air Force Base (AFB) that was accidentally hit by an AIM-9M Sidewinder missile fired by another USAF F-15 on March 19, 1990. The photo clearly shows that the missile severely damaged the aircraft’s tail and only slightly damaged the left wing and engine exhaust.

The pilot of the damaged F-15, Lt. Col. Jimmy L. Harris, made an evasive maneuver after the other F-15 pilot ‘unintentionally’ fired the missile.

Ex USAF F-15 aircraft maintainer Jon Hoogewind remembers on Quora;

‘This F-15 was at Langley AFB the 27th AMU, I was the Production Super. The AK folks had left a live AIM-9 here on a prior visit and wanted it back home. We loaded it safe and umbilical disconnected for ferry back home as there was a captive (practice/inert) AIM-9 loaded on the other wing. The Pilot (Capt) INSISTED we connect the umbilical and remove the safety pins. I was called over and after a conversation with the Capt, he still insisted we arm the AIM-9. I wrote a NOTATION in the aircraft forms on this and that “THIS WAS A LIVE AIM-9 THAT THE CAPT INSISTED BE ARMED” and had the Capt sign it. On the flight home, He got “confused” and while playing intercept with his Lt Col flight lead he fired the LIVE AIM-9, “SHIT—lead, I fired a live AIM-9”—BOOM— Lead response “NO SHIT!” The investigation came back to us as to why we loaded a live AIM-9 on an aircraft with a practice AIM9 on it too. —I told them the “read the forms”—not our problem—back to the PILOT.’

“Ed,” a former USAF weapon loader, recalled on the authoritative website F-16.net;

‘The weapons crew chief (Jeff Lang) that loaded the missile told me that there was a training AIM-9 and a live AIM-9 on the jet. The live AIM-9 was being flown to King Salmon (alert post). He said he wrote in the aircraft forms that there was a live missile and a training missile on the jet, he also told the pilot himself. The crew chief for the jet also told the pilot and the people at EOR also told the pilot.

‘After the investigation, the weapons crew was blamed for everything.

‘The aircrews for both F-15s were cleared of any wrongdoing.

‘Life as a weapons load was hell, you had to write everything in the aircraft forms. What you had loaded, what station, live or inert?

‘Jeff Lang was a good crew chief and one of my go to guys. We went on a TDY to Luke AFB and Jeff got sick and a few weeks later died of a brain aneurysm. His wife was pregnant and had a baby boy after Jeff had passed away. RIP my friend.’

The estimated cost of restoring the aircraft was $992,058; hence, it fell $7,942 shy of Class A status. The F-15 tail that was used as a replacement had just collided with a mountainside.

Photo by: U.S. Air Force

You may also like

Leave a Comment