The RCAF has suffered another tragic loss of a dedicated member of the RCAF team. We are deeply saddened and grieve alongside Jenn’s family and friends. Our thoughts are also with the loved ones of Captain MacDougall. We hope for a swift recovery from his injuries. - Comd RCAF
Crashed CT-114 114161 was uncoded.Le Addeur noir wrote:The crashed CT-114 was reported as code number 7. This puts two airplanes as the prime candidates for the crashed one, 114149 and 114161-in theory.
Regrettably a crew member sustained fatal injuries in this crash.
RIP and blue skies.
Please don't shoot the messenger....Starman wrote:Perhaps giving Captain Jennifer Casey, the team PRO, her full name and title would be more appropriate in this forum.
Rebecca @__CrazyLove
Als antwoord op @RCAF_ARC
Curious why you call her “Jenn” but refer to other individual more professionally?
Royal Canadian Air Force @RCAF_ARC
Hello Rebecca, Captain Jennifer Casey was well known to us all as 'Jenn'. Her loss is personal to many and all who knew her. ~MA
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/snowbi ... -1.5593259Jun 01, 2020 11:51 AM ET | Last Updated: 2 hours ago
In a preliminary report issued Monday,
investigators say video footage from the crash
showed a bird was in very close proximity to the right engine intake during take-off.
It's possible the bird struck the engine's intake, the report suggested.
Snowbirds were waiting for new ejection seats before deadly crash. Now DND won’t say if gear was replaced
Fri., May 29, 2020
Older ejection seats can also save lives, but they work under more limited conditions.
The ejection seats original to the Snowbirds jets were manufactured by Weber Aircraft.
According to several experts, the seats work from zero altitude if the plane is travelling at a speed of 60 knots.
The direction of the plane also influences the effectiveness of the seat,
while this is a less important factor with the zero-zero seats.
...andThe military has been aware of the aging nature of the CT-114 ejection system, and has expressed a need to replace it as far back as 2015,
when the national Defence Department released a report on a project then called the CT-114 Life Extension Beyond 2020.
“The upgrade may include replacing wing components,
replacing the ejection seat with a zero/zero capability
and improving the wheel breaks to allow operations at remote locations,” the 2015 document reads.
An official record of the project under the Department of National Defence’s investment plan,
updated in January 2020 makes no mention of ejection seats.
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