As the RIO in the back seat of the collision Phantom, I can answer a few of the comments. Each flight was under discreet AWACS control, so we were not talking to the Vipers directly. I was flying with the squadron commander, who fortunately was one of the most capable pilots with whom I've ever flown. It was a typical intercept until the pass. My job was to call out range to the pilot in miles inside 5 miles. As I said "1 mile", I felt the aircraft pull up and roll right followed by a sever "thud." The aircraft was still flying normally and our wing man was yelling "knock it off" immediately. It took a few seconds to figure things out, but after a somewhat casual glance off the right side, I realized the collision had sheared off most of our right wing outboard of the wing fold. Fortunately, there aren't a lot of hydraulic lines out that far and no internal fuel tank or we would all have been toast. Our wing man stayed with us for a bit as we headed back to Kunsan, but was eventually diverted to Osan with all the other Kunsan traffic. The aircraft flew normally (I suppose) above 240 knots or so, but had a tenancy to roll at slower airspeeds due to the missing right outer wing panel. As we approached Kunsan, all hell broke loose and just about every emergency you could imagine happened - utility hydraulic failure (no brakes now), auto acceleration on one engine, etc. The Kunsan [single] runway is oriented north/south and there was a significant crosswind out of the west which forced us to overshoot on the first landing attempt. The Skipper and I agreed that if we didn't make it on the ground the next time around, we were going to fly west just off the coast and give the aircraft back to the taxpayers. We corrected for the crosswind the second time and were able to plant the aircraft on the runway at a very fast speed. As I recall (but I could be wrong - this was over 40 years ago), our landing speed exceeded the limits of the BAK-12 arresting gear at Kunsan and we elected not to trap for fear of snapping the arresting wire and getting slingshotted off the runway. We had a "good chute" and the Skipper was able to get the aircraft stopped using the pneumatic brake, but we did have a fire in the right main landing gear. With the tower folks screaming at us about the fire, we did an emergency egress and spent the next three or four hours in sickbay getting physicals (probably the most thorough I had in my 23 years of flying). I was amazed at the amount of holes we had in the back of the aircraft. In the spirit of getting back on the horse, we flew an intercept hop the next day. It took a couple of weeks to get an outer wing panel so we could fly the aircraft down to Kimhae to the rework facility. Our airframes folks plugged the smaller holes with whatever was available, including flattened out Coke and Bud cans! The Skipper and I flew the aircraft down to Kimhae (with downlocks on the gear) just before the squadron returned to MCAS Beaufort, SC. The Korean ground crew cracked up when they saw the aircraft. It was pretty funny. BTW, the aircraft side number was #13 and the Skipper and I had flown it from Beaufort to Iwakuni, Japan on the transpac. She was a brute and great testament to the airworthiness of the Phantom, as was witnessed many times in Viet Nam, etc. We proved again the fact that if you put big enough motors on a refrigerator, it would fly! I continued to fly the F-4 and eventually transitioned to the F/A-18D, but the Phantom will always be my first love. I'm certainly grateful God was looking after us all that day. And very glad, too, that Jack was picked up so quickly and not hurt too badly. Thanks for the interest!
Jack H. was the F-16 pilot and a good friend. I picked him up at the hospital after he was released. He told me the story of this incident and talked about the things that he thought about prior to ejection. He talked about thinking about Becky, his wife, and their kids and how he wondered if he would ever see them again. He talked about thinking of the ejection process and the training he had received if he ever needed to eject. About the indications in the cockpit and his decision to abandon the aircraft. He went on for about thirty minutes describing his emotions and thoughts. Then he pulled the handle. When I finally saw this video in 1983 I was stunned by the sequence of events. The mind is a wondrous thing.
I have an uncle that was stationed Korea about that time, Rick D. call sign JABO. He was a F-16 pilot as well. I need to check with him and see if he was there when this happened. He later flew with the Marines in FA-18's in the exchange program attached to the USS America.
Scary situation to have to eject from a plane. Many pilots are injured during the ejection process and some are never able to fly again. Glad he remembered his training and was fortunate enough to escape injury.
I was stationed at Kunsan AB when this happened and saw the F-4 in the hanger. It had a hole in the vertical stabilizer that you could through a basketball through, debris holes down the right side and the right wingtip was torn off at the hinge location. Great skill on the aircrew's part to bring it back safely. Thanks for posting this.
@@TheSolongsidekick Although they won't announce everything over shared comms, they still need to have contact with each other. When Raccoon 2 called "Knock it off" he was saying that to the Marines. That way they wouldn't keep trying to fight while there was an emergency going on.
@@KutWrite The F-4 did IFE into Kunsan AB as it was missing his wing from the fold outwards. I saw it at EOR when it was surrounded by the fire dept and what seemed like all of the brass on base.
I had a close call with an F-15 attempting to shoot an AIM-9 head on while flying as an Aggressor at Decimomannu, IT (Sardinia) in the 1980s. The F-15 pilot was so fixated on trying to get a lock-on that he pressed the simulated attack until inside of 9,000 feet before pulling away slightly. At our closure rate of over 1,500 feet per second, it took about 5 seconds from the time he called Fox 2 and when he passed over me at what we estimated as less than 200 feet. I did not see him until he passed me, so I took no evasive maneuvers. After this incident, aircrews in USAFE were restricted from pressing a head on attack inside of 2 nm (12,000 feet) and were to immediately make a hard turn away from the target. I am a lucky man to still be here today.
Phantoms could take some serious damage. At Moody we had two Dobbins F-4s land after a midair. The wingman struck leads left stab with his radome and many of the chunks went down the intakes. The pilot only had to shut down one J-79 and landed safely along with his lead. The radome was gone and the radar antenna blew back over the radar package like an umbrella in a hurricane. Many Phantom jocks were Nam vets (this was in the early 1980s, we evacuated in '75) and trained very hard. That's how I learned Phantoms could break engine mounts when over-G'ed and that the bay doors would safely support the engine until landing.
OH CRAP, this really DID happen while I was there with the Wolfpack and I never thought there would be cockpit video of this. My understanding was that the F4 and F 16 collided and snapped the wing off our F-16 at the root where it joins the body. It created a shotgun effect blast of epoxy resin pieces (that the wing was made out of)and threw those pieces through the metal surfaces of that F4!! Thankfully the aircrews got back safe and that heavy metal F4 made it back leaking like crazy but the Marines pulled that thing in the hanger beside us and made noise for a couple of days and what came out of there was nothing short of billboard amazing. Those guys had cut apart every single aluminum can you can imagine from Coke Pepsi beer cans Etc flatten them out and pop riveted them over all the holes in the fuselage of that F4 and fix the leaks, pressure-tested things and they got that Beast back in the air it was absolutely amazing but it looked like this biggest flying ad ever!! Somewhere I have a picture of that amazing sight
Not a stall warning. It was the landing gear warning horn. Varies by aircraft but usually below 10K with a sink rate and less than 200kts. Designed to keep you from landing gear up.
In the F-15 it's the unsafe landing tone. Generated by the ADC or ADP(E-model) if it detects a certain decent rate/airspeed etc w/gear up still. I think it's under 200kts and >2k ft/m decent rate.
Matthew Mulvaney - 2000 foot per minute? It would not be very effective gear warning horn. If you are descending at 2K a minute in the pattern it is just about over gear or not.
This had to be a rough year for the 8th tactical. In November that year Captain Harduval (Who many said to be one of the best US pilots at that time) was killed after his F-16A Block 15 malfunctioned (His widow sued General Dynamics for the defect of the airplane at the time).
Better built? I've worked T-38s and F-16s. The F-16 is a far superior fighter-attack platform. Build quality is the same. Sell your nonsense to someone who hasn't real life experience with those systems. F-20 was fundamentally a re-engined F-5 designed to sell to foreign governments we didn't trust with F-16 or F-15. Not being completely stupid they declined and bought 15s and 16s. Adding another airframe would have been a considerable logistics and support equipment and training hassle.
I hunt with a guy that was stationed there with Captain Harduval. Harduval took off, alone, in conditions that SOP is a no go alone. He took off into grey soup with absolutely no visual references outside. You sit with your shoulders above the canopy rails in a bubble. My friend says he was a mediocre pilot and got disoriented and flew it into the ground, straight down with the burners lit. He also said its not if you vertigo but when in the F-16. My friend is one of the original F-16 pilots. When he retired, he was right up there with most time in the F-16. In addition, I spoke with another hi time F-16 pilot who held exactly the same opinion. I fly fish with him.
I saw the F-4 as it finished it's emergency landing rollout. It pulled into the North EOR and shutdown with lots of emergency vehicles around it as it was leaking from the right wing where the outboard piece was missing from the hinge area. Later, I heard it had sliced through the F-16's belly tank and was found buried within the engine. It pancaked into mudflats just a few miles from the base.
Lol. Pilots who flew the F4 said it was proof that you can strap two huge engines to a brick and it would still fly. Apparently it was as tough as a brick, too.
That plane had a dirty flat spin going on there. That would have been worse than the centrifuge because your weight would be throwing you to the dash rather than into the seat (I think ?). Either way, it would have been fatal. Excellent Video.
@@redondinhoful Flat spins are recoverable. The F-16 even has a switch that gives the fbw more authority over the control surfaces to let you recover faster and easier. They had a floor of 26,000 feet, more than enough for a pilot to get the aircraft back. Of course, in this case, the flat spin wasn't the reason he ejected.
@@JNelson_ I'm pretty sure you can put an F-16 into a flat spin under normal circumstances. I think an F-18 will let you do it too. It also has a "spin mode" that increases the control surface authority which was a switch in the cockpit. It is now automated and the switch exists for maintenance purposes.
He decided his plane was toast and got out promptly which saved his life. To many pilots try to fly the plane there plenty of sad videos out there that show the results of not taking fast and decisive action.
Feels bad to see how the machine tried to stay together unwavered and still worked in spite of the critical damage it sustained, recording all the video and audio that happened, even though itself was doomed, falling and spinning at unimaginable G's. Hats off to it.. RIP poor little aircraft.. Also how was the F4 basically unscathed (that it even landed fine) and took minimal damage at that force? That's insane.
Thorekk fucking brutal, I have seen many of these guys on youtube. They show a strange interest in weapons of war when they aren’t watching cartoons. In this case he anthropomorphizes the Viper. Strange.
Since the people above me are fucking morons apparently and can't give a serious answer. A person in the comments who claims to have saw the aircraft in person since they worked on-base said that there was a hold in the vert. stabilizer that you could fit a basketball through, its not clear and I don't know for sure, but it I would take a guess that the F-16 just "scathed" the vert. stabilizer which must have dragged on the fuselage of the F-16 as it pulled away from the F4, which would explain how the F-16 pilot immediately know that the aircraft was on fire, by smoke or a fire in the cockpit. I'm not an expert, it's just my thoughts and limited observations. I don't know as much about aircraft as some people do, but that's the most helpful information I can think up. Have a great day!
The F-16 landed upside down in mud flats about 10 miles from Kunsan AB. The fuselage where the video recorder was manage to stay mostly intact. I don't know how badly the video cassette was damaged. I suspect they had to get some mud and salt water off of the tape and install it into a new cassette to watch it.
Man, they had digital HUD's in 1982?! Christ, I wasn't even born for 4 more years. And if you think about it, 1982 wasn't too long after Vietnam. We had so much tech coming out in the 80's... if the timeline for the Vietnam War had shifted maybe 5 or so years later, the Vietnamese would have instead fought the US military machine that went in and dominated the 4th largest standing army in Iraq. They better thank their lucky stars didn't have to face the 80's US military.
Not sure what you mean by digital HUD but that's the same kind of HUD as was used in the 60's. Only difference is that the more modern you get the more stuff is shown in the HUD. The only thing I've heard called a digital HUD is when it can display different colours, which the early F-16's certainly didn't..
@@frankeinfish By the digital HUD, I mean the computer displayed information that is shown on the screen. Computers started coming into their own in the 1980's... the only flight tech I'm aware of in the 60's was the Apollo Guidance Computer... and that was essentially fixed numbers on a panel display. I've never seen any footage from the Vietnam War where you can see computer generated numbers and information on the screen in the pilot's forward field of vision. Got any links to videos or websites? I'd love to see some stuff I haven't seen before, I'm a bit of a book hound too.
30 And Hating It - HUD technology started with reflector sites in the 1930s: the only information displayed at that time was an aiming reticle that took into account how much you needed to lead your target. They added additional pieces of information over the years from there....
@@30AndHatingIt I'm assuming you take for granted that an F-14 Tomcat had a HUD in it, since Top Gun was such a popular film. That plane was first flown in 1970, 16 years before you were born, and it had a pretty sophisticated HUD.
@@bartonkj I have seen the reflector sites in some German WW2 aircraft, but my earliest recollection of seeing something moderately sophisticated were the sights in the F-86's in Korea. But these were analog computers... the display in the above video is of a digital nature, and while I absolutely acknowledge it's existence in the time frame outlined in the video, I don't recall seeing anything like it prior to the 80's. I've started researching to see what I can find.
So does anyone have a good idea of what exactly happened? It looks like the f16 pilot tried to pitch up and roll or was that just the plane hitting the f4 and tumbling? If the f16 pilot tried to pitch up did the f4 pilot do that to, or did the f16 just not clear it in time
It looks like both raccoons were late tally, both calling bogeydope. If they were assigned red and blue sanctuaries (to maintain until tally) then they potentially broke them before the bandit called tally and both raccoons called tally. The nautical mile readout showed 1nm /6000ft rapidly decreasing as lead took the fox 2 shot then broke up to avoid collision but collided with the wing of the phantom I believe. Normal procedure is to break out/right well before 1.5nm (or not across flight paths) to preserve a safe bubble but it looks like both jets went up maybe together and collided.
I am surprise the video was still operational after ejecting. I inspected egress items in the Air Force and though the cockpit would be destroyed during the ejection sequence.
"It is easy to tell where the F-4 sliced through" Uh, I can't tell. Hell, if not for the jet engine nozzle, and on closer inspection missile pylon, I would not have been able to tell what this wreckage even was. :o
So, what happened to the F-4 pilot? Nothing said about him. Did he crash? RTB? Ejected? Survive? Was he still ready for the training mission, wondering what all the fuss over the radio was about?
Every part of the F16 was damaged. F4 lost a wing tip and some stabilizer damage. Sounds like the F4 sliced into the bottom of the F16 probably damaging the engine which caused the fire.
The moral of this story is the F-4 Phantom was the better aircraft,we should've kept making them. Tough like P47 Thunderbolts and B-17's And oh yeah Mark my word, we should be cranking out new A-10's right now by the thousands. One day you'll see why.
Matthew McKay technically yes the f4 gets the kill and it just proves that the 60s era jets were better built than the newer jet's but in a 1v1 fight the f16 wins hands down
Scary situation, I'm glad I never had to eject from my F-16. You can bet he was thinking about his family before ejecting. Just shows you that anything can happen in the blink of an eye.
Phillip Simmons not any more as of almost 6 years ago. I had a bad boating accident while I was on a fishing trip. With all of the back pain force me to not fly anymore unfortunately
The closure rate on the two jets was over 1000 knots. That's more than 1150 mph. They were simulating a dogfight, it's a common training tactic. They just didn't see each other fast enough most likely, given the speed at which they came together.
Lived to fly another day! Or just plain live. Glad he had the opportunity to eject and the F-4 got back to the airbase safely. Could of been much worse. That's kinda like a Totota Camry running into a 70's model Chevy Impala.
phan·tom /ˈfan(t)əm/ noun noun: phantom; plural noun: phantoms a ghost. a figment of the imagination. Seems like a lot of damage for a figment of the imagination.
That plane was in a deep stall long before the Stall warning came on. fluttering like a butterfly but falling like a rock, Welcome to the Martin Baker Fan Club.
All of those claver comments.. You should be ashamed of your yourselves. It seems you dont know how much it takes to reach a fighter pilot's position.. its not like driving your slow and boring car and for sure they put theirs lives for the sake of the country, something that you people will never do because you are selfish
They can spend 20 million billion dollars on an airplane but can’t buy a $100 camera to film the stuff with. Filmed with a potato. Wow intensely exciting I’m glad the guy got out
detaildon Err... where did you get that definition from? It means stop whatever it is you are doing, generally for safety reasons. If engaged in BFM, stop the manoeuvre. Starting an engine that develops a fuel leak, cut the engine. Where the situation is safety critical, all personnel would naturally avoid any radio comms not directly relevant to the incident (assuming they have been properly trained and are applying that training) so that important communications get through - your statement is a consequence of the events, not the meaning of the call. Folks wouldn’t carry on high-energy manoeuvres and just stop radio calls, thats a recipe for an even bigger catastrophe; it all stops on that call, and folks role-call their acknowledgements (so everyone knows whos still in the airspace) and immediately begin deconfliction (so no-one else gets involved, allowing all resources to focus on the critical elements of the rescue/recovery of the original participants).
Voice of the lady comes on, Warning, warning ! Autopilot isn't going kick in and fly it back to base and land ? He takes on heat Seeker and pitches up right into the Phantom so he never saw him ? That's a Phantom for you !
As the RIO in the back seat of the collision Phantom, I can answer a few of the comments. Each flight was under discreet AWACS control, so we were not talking to the Vipers directly. I was flying with the squadron commander, who fortunately was one of the most capable pilots with whom I've ever flown. It was a typical intercept until the pass. My job was to call out range to the pilot in miles inside 5 miles. As I said "1 mile", I felt the aircraft pull up and roll right followed by a sever "thud." The aircraft was still flying normally and our wing man was yelling "knock it off" immediately. It took a few seconds to figure things out, but after a somewhat casual glance off the right side, I realized the collision had sheared off most of our right wing outboard of the wing fold. Fortunately, there aren't a lot of hydraulic lines out that far and no internal fuel tank or we would all have been toast. Our wing man stayed with us for a bit as we headed back to Kunsan, but was eventually diverted to Osan with all the other Kunsan traffic. The aircraft flew normally (I suppose) above 240 knots or so, but had a tenancy to roll at slower airspeeds due to the missing right outer wing panel. As we approached Kunsan, all hell broke loose and just about every emergency you could imagine happened - utility hydraulic failure (no brakes now), auto acceleration on one engine, etc. The Kunsan [single] runway is oriented north/south and there was a significant crosswind out of the west which forced us to overshoot on the first landing attempt. The Skipper and I agreed that if we didn't make it on the ground the next time around, we were going to fly west just off the coast and give the aircraft back to the taxpayers. We corrected for the crosswind the second time and were able to plant the aircraft on the runway at a very fast speed. As I recall (but I could be wrong - this was over 40 years ago), our landing speed exceeded the limits of the BAK-12 arresting gear at Kunsan and we elected not to trap for fear of snapping the arresting wire and getting slingshotted off the runway. We had a "good chute" and the Skipper was able to get the aircraft stopped using the pneumatic brake, but we did have a fire in the right main landing gear. With the tower folks screaming at us about the fire, we did an emergency egress and spent the next three or four hours in sickbay getting physicals (probably the most thorough I had in my 23 years of flying). I was amazed at the amount of holes we had in the back of the aircraft. In the spirit of getting back on the horse, we flew an intercept hop the next day. It took a couple of weeks to get an outer wing panel so we could fly the aircraft down to Kimhae to the rework facility. Our airframes folks plugged the smaller holes with whatever was available, including flattened out Coke and Bud cans! The Skipper and I flew the aircraft down to Kimhae (with downlocks on the gear) just before the squadron returned to MCAS Beaufort, SC. The Korean ground crew cracked up when they saw the aircraft. It was pretty funny. BTW, the aircraft side number was #13 and the Skipper and I had flown it from Beaufort to Iwakuni, Japan on the transpac. She was a brute and great testament to the airworthiness of the Phantom, as was witnessed many times in Viet Nam, etc. We proved again the fact that if you put big enough motors on a refrigerator, it would fly! I continued to fly the F-4 and eventually transitioned to the F/A-18D, but the Phantom will always be my first love. I'm certainly grateful God was looking after us all that day. And very glad, too, that Jack was picked up so quickly and not hurt too badly. Thanks for the interest!
@@terryhamilton7278 Thank you for that narrative. Semper Fi
Thanks for the story👍
WOW. Absolutely intense story from someone who was directly involved in the incident. Thank you for sharing.
Jack H. was the F-16 pilot and a good friend. I picked him up at the hospital after he was released. He told me the story of this incident and talked about the things that he thought about prior to ejection. He talked about thinking about Becky, his wife, and their kids and how he wondered if he would ever see them again. He talked about thinking of the ejection process and the training he had received if he ever needed to eject. About the indications in the cockpit and his decision to abandon the aircraft. He went on for about thirty minutes describing his emotions and thoughts. Then he pulled the handle. When I finally saw this video in 1983 I was stunned by the sequence of events. The mind is a wondrous thing.
Could this be "Smiling Jack" we're talking about? Dave-194th FS
I have an uncle that was stationed Korea about that time, Rick D. call sign JABO. He was a F-16 pilot as well. I need to check with him and see if he was there when this happened. He later flew with the Marines in FA-18's in the exchange program attached to the USS America.
Scary situation to have to eject from a plane. Many pilots are injured during the ejection process and some are never able to fly again. Glad he remembered his training and was fortunate enough to escape injury.
Make sure to thank life support
@@ragheadand420roll you're welcome.
I was stationed at Kunsan AB when this happened and saw the F-4 in the hanger. It had a hole in the vertical stabilizer that you could through a basketball through, debris holes down the right side and the right wingtip was torn off at the hinge location. Great skill on the aircrew's part to bring it back safely. Thanks for posting this.
James Alvin that Phantom was sure a tough bird.. Glad everyone got through it safely.
I wonder if the Marine was aware of the extent of the damage. I didn't hear him declare an emergency.
+KutWrite (psssssssssssssssst! If they're training against each other they're probably not on the same radio frequency)
@@TheSolongsidekick Although they won't announce everything over shared comms, they still need to have contact with each other. When Raccoon 2 called "Knock it off" he was saying that to the Marines. That way they wouldn't keep trying to fight while there was an emergency going on.
@@KutWrite The F-4 did IFE into Kunsan AB as it was missing his wing from the fold outwards. I saw it at EOR when it was surrounded by the fire dept and what seemed like all of the brass on base.
Excellent walk through with the subtitles.
I had a close call with an F-15 attempting to shoot an AIM-9 head on while flying as an Aggressor at Decimomannu, IT (Sardinia) in the 1980s. The F-15 pilot was so fixated on trying to get a lock-on that he pressed the simulated attack until inside of 9,000 feet before pulling away slightly. At our closure rate of over 1,500 feet per second, it took about 5 seconds from the time he called Fox 2 and when he passed over me at what we estimated as less than 200 feet. I did not see him until he passed me, so I took no evasive maneuvers. After this incident, aircrews in USAFE were restricted from pressing a head on attack inside of 2 nm (12,000 feet) and were to immediately make a hard turn away from the target. I am a lucky man to still be here today.
Isn't it a beautiful thing when regs don't have to be written in blood? Bless you Sir.
Yawn!
Thanks to you, the military aviation world is safer.
Regards from Italy
Late 80’s by chance? Molino’s or Lorelei’s?
'Player 2 was banned from the server, reason: jet ramming'
That flat spin was insane. Cannot imagine how a pilot feels if it is spinning that fast. As they say "eyeballs out G forces"
Ikr! I could not even try to imagine being in an aircraft, spinning that quickly...!?
plane was pilot-less at that point in the video.
I cant handle the Gs in an elevator
He'd have blacked out, good job he punched out long before that happened. Saved his own life.
That's why "Goose" didn't have a chance.
This is what happens when you allow racoon to fly F-16's
lol
Best laugh of the day!!!
Coffee just blew through my nose. Thanks....!!!
Oh man the picture this painted in my mind made me feel like 3rd grader haha
🤣😂😂🤣😂😂😂
Phantoms could take some serious damage. At Moody we had two Dobbins F-4s land after a midair. The wingman struck leads left stab with his radome and many of the chunks went down the intakes. The pilot only had to shut down one J-79 and landed safely along with his lead. The radome was gone and the radar antenna blew back over the radar package like an umbrella in a hurricane. Many Phantom jocks were Nam vets (this was in the early 1980s, we evacuated in '75) and trained very hard. That's how I learned Phantoms could break engine mounts when over-G'ed and that the bay doors would safely support the engine until landing.
Holy shit! It could break it's own engine mounts!?
@@kalashnikovdevil Yeah but just keep the door shut, it'll be fine.
OH CRAP, this really DID happen while I was there with the Wolfpack and I never thought there would be cockpit video of this. My understanding was that the F4 and F 16 collided and snapped the wing off our F-16 at the root where it joins the body. It created a shotgun effect blast of epoxy resin pieces (that the wing was made out of)and threw those pieces through the metal surfaces of that F4!! Thankfully the aircrews got back safe and that heavy metal F4 made it back leaking like crazy but the Marines pulled that thing in the hanger beside us and made noise for a couple of days and what came out of there was nothing short of billboard amazing. Those guys had cut apart every single aluminum can you can imagine from Coke Pepsi beer cans Etc flatten them out and pop riveted them over all the holes in the fuselage of that F4 and fix the leaks, pressure-tested things and they got that Beast back in the air it was absolutely amazing but it looked like this biggest flying ad ever!! Somewhere I have a picture of that amazing sight
Terry Duffield would love to see that picture. Please send to stoneyj50@yahoo
Yeah, ABDR is a lot easier on F-4 than on F16s.
@@stoneyj50 Did u get the picture?
Wait they actually did that? Is it cause the f4 was old cause I couldn't imagine that being done on a newer jet
@@stoneyj50 Would like to know if you got that picture!
F4 is like a flying tank, still landed even after striking the f16, pretty amazing
The Lead Sled is like, "Was there a collision?"
WSO , "no , I just farted is all. Why did that guy over there eject ?"
Not a stall warning. It was the landing gear warning horn. Varies by aircraft but usually below 10K with a sink rate and less than 200kts. Designed to keep you from landing gear up.
In the F-15 it's the unsafe landing tone. Generated by the ADC or ADP(E-model) if it detects a certain decent rate/airspeed etc w/gear up still. I think it's under 200kts and >2k ft/m decent rate.
Matthew Mulvaney - 2000 foot per minute? It would not be very effective gear warning horn. If you are descending at 2K a minute in the pattern it is just about over gear or not.
What timestamp?
@@YaBoyFlaky5663 ??
@@bja2024 nevermind
Happy to hear that both Pilots havent been seriously injured.
F-16: I'm finished, no fighter jet can survive such a hard impact.
F-4: Hold my beer.
This had to be a rough year for the 8th tactical. In November that year Captain Harduval (Who many said to be one of the best US pilots at that time) was killed after his F-16A Block 15 malfunctioned
(His widow sued General Dynamics for the defect of the airplane at the time).
cripplehawk I remember him. Met him briefly when i was stationed at Osan.
Makes you wonder why the military didn't go with the F-20 TigerShark, a much better built, tactical, faster, reliable fighter jet.
Better built? I've worked T-38s and F-16s. The F-16 is a far superior fighter-attack platform. Build quality is the same. Sell your nonsense to someone who hasn't real life experience with those systems. F-20 was fundamentally a re-engined F-5 designed to sell to foreign governments we didn't trust with F-16 or F-15. Not being completely stupid they declined and bought 15s and 16s. Adding another airframe would have been a considerable logistics and support equipment and training hassle.
I hunt with a guy that was stationed there with Captain Harduval. Harduval took off, alone, in conditions that SOP is a no go alone. He took off into grey soup with absolutely no visual references outside. You sit with your shoulders above the canopy rails in a bubble. My friend says he was a mediocre pilot and got disoriented and flew it into the ground, straight down with the burners lit. He also said its not if you vertigo but when in the F-16. My friend is one of the original F-16 pilots. When he retired, he was right up there with most time in the F-16. In addition, I spoke with another hi time F-16 pilot who held exactly the same opinion. I fly fish with him.
@@Vooodoo101 do you also poop with him?
I saw the F-4 as it finished it's emergency landing rollout. It pulled into the North EOR and shutdown with lots of emergency vehicles around it as it was leaking from the right wing where the outboard piece was missing from the hinge area.
Later, I heard it had sliced through the F-16's belly tank and was found buried within the engine. It pancaked into mudflats just a few miles from the base.
Lol. Pilots who flew the F4 said it was proof that you can strap two huge engines to a brick and it would still fly. Apparently it was as tough as a brick, too.
Glad to hear the pilot was ok... I recall a couple training exersizes on subs that didn't go as planned as well...
2:38 Go home computer, you're drunk. Does footage exist from the other plane's PoV?
It went into a flat spin after it lost its pilot and stalled, which is why it was spinning so fast.
@@christianitis Yes, and the question was about the other plane...
That plane had a dirty flat spin going on there. That would have been worse than the centrifuge because your weight would be throwing you to the dash rather than into the seat (I think ?). Either way, it would have been fatal.
Excellent Video.
Wow, how do you recover from such stall?
@@zaidakbaralmuharram2984 You don't
@@redondinhoful Flat spins are recoverable. The F-16 even has a switch that gives the fbw more authority over the control surfaces to let you recover faster and easier. They had a floor of 26,000 feet, more than enough for a pilot to get the aircraft back. Of course, in this case, the flat spin wasn't the reason he ejected.
@@kitt7041 Except the reason the FBW even let it go in to a flat spin is the F-16 was likely heavily damaged.
@@JNelson_ I'm pretty sure you can put an F-16 into a flat spin under normal circumstances. I think an F-18 will let you do it too. It also has a "spin mode" that increases the control surface authority which was a switch in the cockpit. It is now automated and the switch exists for maintenance purposes.
He decided his plane was toast and got out promptly which saved his life. To many pilots try to fly the plane there plenty of sad videos out there that show the results of not taking fast and decisive action.
Being on fire will definitely give you some motivation.
After 20 seconds of flat spin at 0 kn fas : “stall warning”
Ya think?
Thanks for nothing Betty 😑
She did call out the master alarm caution immediately.
What is this guy's major malfunction? When that happens to me, I just respawn in a new jet.
He is role playing obviously
Boring.
Feels bad to see how the machine tried to stay together unwavered and still worked in spite of the critical damage it sustained, recording all the video and audio that happened, even though itself was doomed, falling and spinning at unimaginable G's. Hats off to it.. RIP poor little aircraft.. Also how was the F4 basically unscathed (that it even landed fine) and took minimal damage at that force? That's insane.
Why? The machine doesn't give a fuck.
Thorekk fucking brutal, I have seen many of these guys on youtube. They show a strange interest in weapons of war when they aren’t watching cartoons. In this case he anthropomorphizes the Viper. Strange.
Since the people above me are fucking morons apparently and can't give a serious answer. A person in the comments who claims to have saw the aircraft in person since they worked on-base said that there was a hold in the vert. stabilizer that you could fit a basketball through, its not clear and I don't know for sure, but it I would take a guess that the F-16 just "scathed" the vert. stabilizer which must have dragged on the fuselage of the F-16 as it pulled away from the F4, which would explain how the F-16 pilot immediately know that the aircraft was on fire, by smoke or a fire in the cockpit. I'm not an expert, it's just my thoughts and limited observations. I don't know as much about aircraft as some people do, but that's the most helpful information I can think up. Have a great day!
The F-16 was recovered and fixed to where it was now back in the skies
@@DCrypt1 You can't have an interest in weapons of war? Thats oddly rich.
How the hell did they recover the tape? Thats awesome
I always wonder that also
Black box
The F-16 landed upside down in mud flats about 10 miles from Kunsan AB. The fuselage where the video recorder was manage to stay mostly intact. I don't know how badly the video cassette was damaged. I suspect they had to get some mud and salt water off of the tape and install it into a new cassette to watch it.
Stinking F4 jock probably said.."ground I think I hit a bird...no damage though..." Lol
I’m not surprised the Phantom carried on flying... One tough old bird!!!
Much heavier bird, not surprised it faired better than the viper in the collision
Yup, they regularly came back from Ops with huge holes in them from a Sam hit in Vietnam!!! F16 is an amazing aircraft but can’t take a Sam hit.
If the F-16 had hit the F-4 fuselage it would most likely have died as well...
Incredible stuff. Thanks for posting.
That collision would be like a 1957 Chevy sedan hitting a Smart Car™ at freeway speeds...The Chevy driver asks, “Did we just run over a squirrel?”
I think he ran over a raccoon 🤷♂️
I think the smart car would wreck the Chevy, old cars didn’t have such great geometry for taking impacts, I get your sentiment though
VZ_ 342 yeah I agree with what he said the smart car would probably be better off
I'd rather be in the smart car.
The chevy is probably laying upside down in a ditch with the passengers speared by steel chassis parts.
Alaric Niemi Mass overrules geometry in a collision.
Raccoon? Everyone knows that beavers are better pilots!
Then there's ferrets 😄
How was it "partially" damaged by impact. It feel straight down from the sky!?
Man, they had digital HUD's in 1982?! Christ, I wasn't even born for 4 more years. And if you think about it, 1982 wasn't too long after Vietnam. We had so much tech coming out in the 80's... if the timeline for the Vietnam War had shifted maybe 5 or so years later, the Vietnamese would have instead fought the US military machine that went in and dominated the 4th largest standing army in Iraq. They better thank their lucky stars didn't have to face the 80's US military.
Not sure what you mean by digital HUD but that's the same kind of HUD as was used in the 60's. Only difference is that the more modern you get the more stuff is shown in the HUD.
The only thing I've heard called a digital HUD is when it can display different colours, which the early F-16's certainly didn't..
@@frankeinfish By the digital HUD, I mean the computer displayed information that is shown on the screen. Computers started coming into their own in the 1980's... the only flight tech I'm aware of in the 60's was the Apollo Guidance Computer... and that was essentially fixed numbers on a panel display. I've never seen any footage from the Vietnam War where you can see computer generated numbers and information on the screen in the pilot's forward field of vision. Got any links to videos or websites? I'd love to see some stuff I haven't seen before, I'm a bit of a book hound too.
30 And Hating It - HUD technology started with reflector sites in the 1930s: the only information displayed at that time was an aiming reticle that took into account how much you needed to lead your target. They added additional pieces of information over the years from there....
@@30AndHatingIt
I'm assuming you take for granted that an F-14 Tomcat had a HUD in it, since Top Gun was such a popular film. That plane was first flown in 1970, 16 years before you were born, and it had a pretty sophisticated HUD.
@@bartonkj I have seen the reflector sites in some German WW2 aircraft, but my earliest recollection of seeing something moderately sophisticated were the sights in the F-86's in Korea. But these were analog computers... the display in the above video is of a digital nature, and while I absolutely acknowledge it's existence in the time frame outlined in the video, I don't recall seeing anything like it prior to the 80's. I've started researching to see what I can find.
Didnt knew war thunder pilots existed in real life lol
Just followed your link from there and watched the Original..Thanks!
Truly appreciate your and your family's hard work, sacrifice, and bravery. FREEDOM IS NOT FREE. May we never squander it!🦅🇺🇸🙏❤
So does anyone have a good idea of what exactly happened? It looks like the f16 pilot tried to pitch up and roll or was that just the plane hitting the f4 and tumbling?
If the f16 pilot tried to pitch up did the f4 pilot do that to, or did the f16 just not clear it in time
It looks like both raccoons were late tally, both calling bogeydope. If they were assigned red and blue sanctuaries (to maintain until tally) then they potentially broke them before the bandit called tally and both raccoons called tally. The nautical mile readout showed 1nm /6000ft rapidly decreasing as lead took the fox 2 shot then broke up to avoid collision but collided with the wing of the phantom I believe. Normal procedure is to break out/right well before 1.5nm (or not across flight paths) to preserve a safe bubble but it looks like both jets went up maybe together and collided.
Were these F-16 guys from the 8th Tactical? (Wolfpack)
Roger that
35 TFS.
I am surprise the video was still operational after ejecting. I inspected egress items in the Air Force and though the cockpit would be destroyed during the ejection sequence.
This where Rocket learned to fly before he became a Guardian?
This is what the F-16 looked like after it crashed on the mudflats during it's recovery...
www.f-16.net/g3/f-16-photos/album30/81-0724
"It is easy to tell where the F-4 sliced through"
Uh, I can't tell. Hell, if not for the jet engine nozzle, and on closer inspection missile pylon, I would not have been able to tell what this wreckage even was. :o
So, what happened to the F-4 pilot? Nothing said about him. Did he crash? RTB? Ejected? Survive? Was he still ready for the training mission, wondering what all the fuss over the radio was about?
They landed safely at Kunsan AB. Fixed the damage with duct tape and some minor sheet work and flew plane back to their home base.
Eldridge, He was flying an F-4. What else do you need to know?
How'd they get the video? Did they fish the jet out of the ocean, or is that stuff transmitted and recorded remotely?
+dLimboStick They pulled the jet off of the mudflats about a week later and recovered the videotape that we are seeing.
+Eric Johnson I worked at Kunsan AB for about 3 months in 1993. I remember they had the best Mexican restaurant in Korea. :)
Is there a livefeed from the cockpit they recieve?
Yep, but they took the footage with a GoPro 17. They have to wait a few more years before they can download 24k footage on future Crystal Drives.
So what part of each plane hit and was damaged?
Every part of the F16 was damaged. F4 lost a wing tip and some stabilizer damage. Sounds like the F4 sliced into the bottom of the F16 probably damaging the engine which caused the fire.
The moral of this story is the F-4 Phantom was the better aircraft,we should've kept making them.
Tough like P47 Thunderbolts and B-17's
And oh yeah Mark my word, we should be cranking out new A-10's right now by the thousands. One day you'll see why.
Ripcord why the F-4 when the F-14 with Phoenix missiles is better
So...I guess the Marine F-4 gets the win right? Who says an F-4 can't defeat an F-16?
Matthew McKay technically yes the f4 gets the kill and it just proves that the 60s era jets were better built than the newer jet's but in a 1v1 fight the f16 wins hands down
M Dobson, technically, this was a 1v1 fight.
The F-4 won by using itself as the missile!
Even a Soviet era mig 21 bison Indian pilot shot down a Pakistani f16 jet.
@@thegreatgatsby8180 you may want to recheck that information
Raccoons shouldn't being flying military jets
f4 dont need no stinking missiles
Fox-4
I'm stupid here. Were they side by side and hit or what?
Joey Troutman they hit headed on
Seems the F-16 is like the P-51, agile but fragile.
What happened to the F-4 crew ??
They landed safely the F4 went right thru the F-16 like a Tank.
@@phillipsimmons5 ok good show ....dam it man poor F-16
That is some scarey stuff, and some dizzining stuff as well
Amazing. Really glad the bloke was ok.
Don't mess with a Phantom.
ive done this in vr more times than im willing to admit, yeah i know they're going fast but they're going so fast
Scary situation, I'm glad I never had to eject from my F-16. You can bet he was thinking about his family before ejecting. Just shows you that anything can happen in the blink of an eye.
Are you still flying F-16s?
Phillip Simmons not any more as of almost 6 years ago. I had a bad boating accident while I was on a fishing trip. With all of the back pain force me to not fly anymore unfortunately
@@heathfitzgerald363 Thank you for your service.
How much did that cost us?
Couple of ten million dollars
Who was at fault? Is this just something you can't prevent while flying during war time? Was somebody not paying attention?
The closure rate on the two jets was over 1000 knots. That's more than 1150 mph. They were simulating a dogfight, it's a common training tactic. They just didn't see each other fast enough most likely, given the speed at which they came together.
how the fuck, out of all the air particles he had to hit the ones on the other F-16..........
sorry correction *another F-4
Who do we send the bill to?
The fact that the aircraft was going straight down would not indicate a zero airspeed condition. It may have been damaged in the collision.
It was in a flat spin.....
Wow, that collision saved the Phantom driver's life. They had a good lock on him. Phew...
F-4s are flying tanks ... the only plane tougher is a Warthog
and those went down in droves in Iraq...
After this accident, F 16 pilot was drinking beer in that night in the bar.
They don't build them like they used to. F4 rocks.
i'd much rather be driving an F-16
keegan773 not as great as the F-35, tho
@ keegan: We've had F-4s low and fast over the house as recently as a year ago. No mistaking it : )
If that was an F-15 that F-4 would’ve shit it’s pants.
Did the missile hit the jet and took it down?
The F-4 jet hit the F-16 head on.
Lived to fly another day! Or just plain live. Glad he had the opportunity to eject and the F-4 got back to the airbase safely. Could of been much worse. That's kinda like a Totota Camry running into a 70's model Chevy Impala.
Why all the yelling? Aren't these professionals? Jeeshh
I don't understand, why they are yelling so loud?
smh...
Smh 😔 I'll never understand how some people have an extremely serious lack in basic reasoning and comprehension skills.
@@no-won Or others' inability to recognize or understand sarcasm.
defending korea looks so hard
BANNED (30 Mins) - Reason: RAMMING
so both dudes!! act of god
3, f-4 is a two-seater.
F 16 planes are the best.
I didn't see the impact.
All of a sudden didn’t sound so cool.
High Speed High-Fives are not authorized!
Yes... He had locked him with his radar.
Also it means (Big X) that if you shoot a missile it will be missed.
phan·tom
/ˈfan(t)əm/
noun
noun: phantom; plural noun: phantoms
a ghost.
a figment of the imagination.
Seems like a lot of damage for a figment of the imagination.
God, that constant wavering tone is sickening. Scary shite!
me in DCS:
I guess the camera was made by the lowest bidder?
Angel's 2 4 12 what it that
I would have shit my pants
That plane was in a deep stall long before the Stall warning came on. fluttering like a butterfly but falling like a rock, Welcome to the Martin Baker Fan Club.
F4 build like a tank...i wonder what happen with F35...the newer the aircraft the more fragile they get.
Weaker structurally maybe, but much smaller radar signature, faster, and more maneuverable. Everything has a price.
The F-35 probably would have caught fire and ignited the jet fuel in the F-4.
Far out!
Multi-Million dollar jets and they produce horrible quality video that's hardly watchable.
It's purposefully downgraded before it gets released
@@no-won and also "1982"
All of those claver comments.. You should be ashamed of your yourselves. It seems you dont know how much it takes to reach a fighter pilot's position.. its not like driving your slow and boring car and for sure they put theirs lives for the sake of the country, something that you people will never do because you are selfish
Drago mi je...
Vi ne idete dole, vec ste se usrali od straha, i vi pilot moj kurac...
800 km.... Brzina....
G&R
They can spend 20 million billion dollars on an airplane but can’t buy a $100 camera to film the stuff with. Filmed with a potato.
Wow intensely exciting I’m glad the guy got out
You realize that this happened in 1982, right? :D
LOL! You do have to remember this is from 1982 and the camera cassette was tape much like the old beta style. GoPro was still a generation away.
Stupid fuckface
WimsicleStranger Nice language sir
F1CT1C10U5 I don’t care when it was filmed. Surely they were better cameras available than the one they used
Knock it off doesn't mean end the training. It means emergency radio transmissions only.
detaildon Err... where did you get that definition from? It means stop whatever it is you are doing, generally for safety reasons. If engaged in BFM, stop the manoeuvre. Starting an engine that develops a fuel leak, cut the engine. Where the situation is safety critical, all personnel would naturally avoid any radio comms not directly relevant to the incident (assuming they have been properly trained and are applying that training) so that important communications get through - your statement is a consequence of the events, not the meaning of the call. Folks wouldn’t carry on high-energy manoeuvres and just stop radio calls, thats a recipe for an even bigger catastrophe; it all stops on that call, and folks role-call their acknowledgements (so everyone knows whos still in the airspace) and immediately begin deconfliction (so no-one else gets involved, allowing all resources to focus on the critical elements of the rescue/recovery of the original participants).
FALCON 4 BMS!!!
hehehe player 2
Wait! 2 American made F-16 flown by Koreans engaged 2 American F-4 Phantoms flown by US Marines. Sounds like a comedy to me.
No. It was 2 American Air Force pilots in a training dogfight against 2 Marine F-4s. The video was from the F-16's perspective.
The F16s were stationed at a Korean Airbase. Everyone was american involved though.
Yankees ...
What
Voice of the lady comes on, Warning, warning ! Autopilot isn't going kick in and fly it back to base and land ? He takes on heat Seeker and pitches up right into the Phantom so he never saw him ? That's a Phantom for you !
Dr. G Man Saturn G the f16 doesn’t have a return to base and land autopilot also the plane was missing a wing
That is Grandy my Grandpa
This is indian pilot Abhinandan when he was shot down by Pakistan's F-16.....Abhinandan saying to himself, " I hope the Tea is Fantastic".
So, this is how the Pakistani F-16 pilot felt when he was downed by a Mig-21 on 28th February 2019 and then got beaten to death by their own people. 🤣