Black Hawk’s stabilizing device failed before deadly
crash in the Sinai
1 day ago
The mishap on the morning of Nov. 12, 2020, took the
lives of seven peacekeepers — five U.S. troops, a French officer and a Czech
soldier. A sixth American survived the mishap and was medically evacuated after
being found by rescuers sitting upright amongst the wreckage.
The impact split the Black Hawk into three sections
over a 300-foot debris field, according to pictures included in investigation
documents released to Army Times through a Freedom of Information Act request.
The Black Hawk’s horizontal stabilator failed multiple
times during a two-hour flight and was being controlled manually when the
accident occurred, according to the investigation’s field report, which was
compiled by the U.S. Army Combat Readiness Center, out of Fort Rucker, Alabama.
The horizontal stabilator is a flap affixed to the tail of the Black Hawk to maintain stable flight. It can operate in either an automatic or manual mode, though it is commonly left in automatic.
Audio recordings aboard the aircraft revealed that a “stabilator anomaly was announced by a crewmember” during the routine reconnaissance mission, the field report stated. When the accident happened, the stabilator was in manual mode and in the wrong position.
The mishap took place after the reconnaissance mission
was completed and the crew was delivering a sling-loaded water bladder to a
remote site on the island of Tiran, located between the Sinai and Saudi Arabia.
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