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U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. Richard Penny, Ashley Staley and Adam Bradshaw sit on a rock bank on Fort Monroe Beach, Virginia, June 28, 2018, where they had saved a young girl from drowning earlier that year. Penny, Staley and Bradshaw rescued the girl from drowning near the rock bank on May 13, 2018 and received the Hampton, Virginia, Citizen Lifesaving certificate June 7, 2018. Penny works as the 633rd Air Base Wing Inspector General management internal control toolset administrator and special access program manager. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Anthony Nin Leclerec) JBLE Airman helps save drowning girl
A child was drowning at Fort Monroe Beach, Virginia, May 13, 2018. When medical services arrived, they found a young girl that had been rescued from the water and was in her mother’s arms. The nine-year-old had gone swimming, when the current took her into deeper waters where she could no longer stand and was getting closer to the rocks.
0 7/03
2018
Zach Demers, an aerospace engineer, demonstrates the Automatic Ground Collision Avoidance System (Auto GCAS) in an F-16 flight simulator at the Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, April 18. Auto GCAS, which constantly compares the aircraft's speed and position to a digital terrain map and will automatically take control if it detects an imminent ground collision, is credited with saving the lives of four pilots. (U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Brian Ferguson)
Point of Recovery: Ground Collision Avoidance System saving pilots lives
Frantic calls of “Two recover, Two recover, Two recover,” echoed across the airwaves. Maj. Luke O’Sullivan, F-16 Fighting Falcon instructor pilot, watched helplessly from his cockpit as his student’s jet descended from an altitude of over 3 miles to under 4,400 feet in a matter of seconds. While executing a more than 8-G turn, the over 1,000 pounds of pressure had drained the blood from the student’s brain, causing tunnel vision and impairing his ability to rationalize. Within seconds, he was a victim of gravity-induced loss of consciousness. Given the rapid rate of descent, O’Sullivan knew there was no way the pilot could regain consciousness in time to pull out of the free fall. In less than four seconds, his student would be dead — except, he didn’t die. Instead, the essentially pilotless F-16 rolled upright, pulled a 5-G climb and then leveled off. The pilot’s savior: a technology developed in the 1980s known as the Automatic Ground Collision Avoidance System.
0 12/09
2016
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