F-22 pilot in Hawaii
briefly has oxygen deficit
HONOLULU (AP) - The Hawaii Air
National Guard said Tuesday one of its pilots briefly experienced an oxygen
deficit while flying an F-22 stealth fighter last week.
The pilot was heading back to
Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam from a routine training sortie when sensors
indicated he wasn't getting as much oxygen as he should, said Lt. Col. Charles
Anthony, a spokesman for the Hawaii Guard.
The pilot also felt dizzy. He
activated the emergency oxygen system until his symptoms abated and the plane's
oxygen generating system returned to normal.
The pilot landed safely after
Friday's incident, the first time a Hawaii F-22 pilot has experienced hypoxia,
or oxygen deprivation, Anthony said.
A medical exam cleared the pilot
for duty. All 14 of the Hawaii National Guard's F-22 planes are operational,
Anthony said.
The nation's F-22 fighter jets
were grounded for four months last year after pilots complained of experiencing
a lack of oxygen that can cause dizziness and blackouts.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.