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  #11  
Old 17th September 2008, 06:18 AM
damien b damien b is offline
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From news.com.au - aircraft was a C-130.

Quote:
Hercules fleet grounded after emergency landing
September 17, 2008 02:10am

THE Defence Force has grounded its fleet of Hercules C-130 transport aircraft after an "unusual" fault prompted an emergency landing.

The fault was detected on Monday night during a training flight near Richmond, north-west of Sydney, a Defence spokeswoman told Fairfax newspapers.

Following the incident, all 24 of the RAAF's Hercules planes were grounded for all non-essential flights until the cause had been detected.

Defence said a plane had declared an emergency on Monday about 8.25pm (AEST) after its crew detected a fault with the nose-wheel.

At 8.55pm the crew put in a mayday call but landed safely at the Richmond Base 20 minutes later.

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  #12  
Old 17th September 2008, 06:55 AM
AdamC AdamC is offline
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Are we looking at history in the making, A helicopter that turns into a C130.

Someones been watching to much transformers me thinks.
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  #13  
Old 17th September 2008, 08:26 AM
Steve Jones Steve Jones is offline
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Grounded both the H and J models or just one of them?
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  #14  
Old 17th September 2008, 09:47 AM
Tony P Tony P is offline
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Mentor = C-130 training sortie
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  #15  
Old 17th September 2008, 06:55 PM
Bob C Bob C is offline
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Hi Steve

The news report said all 24 of the RAAF's Hercules so that must be H and J models.

However, I recall reading that two C130Hs were grounded some time ago due to cracks in the main spar (I think) and will never fly again.

The grounding of the rest of fleet, however temporary, is probably a first in the RAAF's history, and will have a serious effect on operations overseas where several are based.
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  #16  
Old 18th September 2008, 12:53 PM
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Jethro H Jethro H is offline
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So, where did the ABC get the "helicopter" story?!?

The C130 apparently had a wheel nose problem. It was still parked at the end of the runway early morning with crews working around it.
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  #17  
Old 22nd September 2008, 08:49 PM
Gerard M Gerard M is offline
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Did anyone hear any more on what happened here or whether they still have them all grounded?

Gerard
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  #18  
Old 23rd September 2008, 06:04 AM
damien b damien b is offline
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Not sure on the temporary grounding status but according to a former C-130 crewie, a C-130H model suffered a nose gear strut failure whilst doing dirt strip touch and go practice out west. They made a very soft but safe landing in Richmond.
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  #19  
Old 26th September 2008, 07:40 PM
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From Defence today
Quote:
HERCULES FLEET RETURNS TO NORMAL FLYING OPERATIONS


The Air Force’s fleet of C-130 Hercules aircraft has returned to normal flying activities.

A restriction on flying operations was imposed as a precautionary measure following an incident with a C-130H Hercules aircraft during a training flight on September 15.

The aircraft encountered a fault with its nose landing gear, and returned safely to RAAF Base Richmond. Defence immediately launched an investigation into the fault, and limited the Hercules fleet to all but essential flights.

Group Captain Gary Martin, Officer Commanding of No. 86 Wing, said “an Air Force investigation, conducted in consultation with DSTO and the aircraft manufacturer Lockheed Martin, has concluded that the nose landing gear failure was an isolated instance caused by a manufacturing defect that posed low risk to other aircraft in the fleet.”

“The C-130 Hercules fleet is being returned to normal flying operations,” Group Captain Martin said.

“Air Force’s response to this incident demonstrates our commitment to safety, as well as the professionalism and skill of our personnel when under pressure.”

The Air Force has a fleet of 24 C-130 Hercules, operated from RAAF Base Richmond.

These aircraft are an important part of the Australian Defence Force, providing a combat airlift capability.
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