The Fokker F-28 is suspended at NASA Langley's gantry before a drop test at the Landing and Impact Research Facility.
Credits: NASA
HAMPTON, Virginia -- Media is invited to a crash test of a Fokker F-28 transport aircraft will be conducted at the Landing and Impact Research Facility (LandIR),
on June 20, 2019.
This will be the largest full-sized aircraft ever dropped at the LandIR.
This test will provide researchers with important data on aircraft crash-safety by using crash-test dummies for occupant crash response and likelihood of injury.
This data can be used in computer simulations to advance aircraft crash-safety for future airline passengers and cargo.
Collaborators include the FAA Civil Aeromedical Institute, US Army Test and Evaluation Command, and the National Transportation Safety Board.
Two separate events will occur for the test.
A pre-mission brief will be held at 10:00am covering the purpose and expectations of the test.
The crash test will then occur between 01:00pm and 02:00pm.
Two gate-calls will be held at the NASA Langley Visitor Center for interested parties. One at 09:15am
(for those who wish to see the briefing) and another at 12:15pm.
Not the first time NASA is destroying an airframe for crash test purposes. I vaguely recall a crash test they performed way back in the 80's with a radio controlled Boeing 720 which they crash landed.
Rene Klok wrote:Not the first time NASA is destroying an airframe for crash test purposes. I vaguely recall a crash test they performed way back in the 80's with a radio controlled Boeing 720 which they crash landed.
Rene Klok wrote:Not the first time NASA is destroying an airframe for crash test purposes. I vaguely recall a crash test they performed way back in the 80's with a radio controlled Boeing 720 which they crash landed.
Google tells me it's former Canadian C-GCRN. The people at NASA marked the plane as C-RASH . Here's a link to the Aviation Safety Network report on it with another video: https://news.aviation-safety.net/2019/0 ... kker-f-28/