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Aviation enthusiast potentially saves pilot's life after seeing sparks coming from his plane

  
Via:  Split Personality  •  3 years ago  •  5 comments

By:   Jeevan Ravindran (MSN)

Aviation enthusiast potentially saves pilot's life after seeing sparks coming from his plane
Photographer and aviation enthusiast Ian Simpson has lived in the East Anglia region of England all his life, and one of his favorite things to do is photograph planes at Royal Air Force bases in the area.

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Photographer and aviation enthusiast Ian Simpson has lived in the East Anglia region of England all his life, and one of his favorite things to do is photograph planes at Royal Air Force bases in the area.

e151e5.gif © Ian Simpson Sparks fly from the back of a US Air Force F-15E Strike Eagle fighter jet piloted by Maj. Grant Thompson as it takes off from Royal Air Force Lakenheath on July 13, 2021.

But on the morning of July 13, he realized something wasn't quite right as he watched jets taking off at RAF Lakenheath in Suffolk, about 70 miles northeast of London. The base is run by the US Air Force and is home to the 48th Fighter Wing, the only US Air Force F-15 fighter wing in Europe.

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"This plane took off and just before it got to us ... a lot of flames and sparks started coming out the back," Simpson told CNN.

Simpson, who previously worked for Boeing in designing aircraft traffic control procedures, listened to the radio communications between pilot Maj. Grant Thompson and the base to see if any action would be taken, but to his surprise nobody else seemed to have noticed.

When he heard that the aircraft was set to refuel over the North Sea, Simpson realized the pilot was unaware of possible problems with his aircraft.

"It suddenly dawned on me that they had no idea what was going on," the 56-year-old plane spotter said. "So at that point, I called the base, by looking on Google for the telephone number."

The switchboard operator connected him with the flight operations center, who then got in touch with air traffic control and the pilot. After Thompson got his wingman to confirm damage to the right motor of his F15-E Strike Eagle, the pilot safely returned to base.

A week later, the pair met and Thompson thanked Simpson for his intervention, giving the aviation fan a legacy cap and the fighter wing patch that he was wearing that day, removing it from the sleeve of his jumpsuit in what the base called "quite a significant gesture."

Simpson may not think much of his actions but personnel from 48th Fighter Wing praised his quick thinking.

"The courage that Ian displayed was next to none," said Capt. Marie Ortiz, media operations chief for the 48th Fighter Wing, which includes Thompson's 492nd Fighter Squadron. "Just that one phone call speaks volumes for our area and the relationship."

Ortiz said an incident like this was "a very rare occurrence" and Simpson said he'd never seen anything of the sort in 50 years of watching planes.

"I've seen a few incidents where something isn't working ... but when parts of the plane are disintegrating in a shower of sparks, then that's a bit different," he said. "When you've been around planes long enough, you know when something isn't right."

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e151e5.gif © Capt. Marie Ortiz Photographer Ian Simpson meets fighter pilot Maj. Grant Thompson on July 20, 2021 after Simpson made a potentially lifesaving intervention when he spotted something wrong with Thompson's F-15E Strike Eagle fighter jet.


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Split Personality
Professor Guide
1  seeder  Split Personality    3 years ago

No politics, thanks

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
2  Ender    3 years ago

Good for him. Have to admit though, I am surprised they let him through to talk to someone.

 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
2.1  seeder  Split Personality  replied to  Ender @2    3 years ago

I guess if you tell them parts of that F15 that just took off are falling on my house, they pay attention, lol.

It's also a Brit base.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
3  Kavika     3 years ago

Right place at the right time and the right person. 

Well done sir.

 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
4  seeder  Split Personality    3 years ago

I used to live in a nice development on the west side of Willow Grove Naval Air Base and have seen some strange things.

A-10 target ammo that fell out of aircraft or helicopters over civilian housing.

A rebuilt F-4 which unexplainedly turned West right down my street on takeoff,

full military throttle about 400ft off the ground which broke windows,

set off car alarms and dogs, knocking pictures off the wall.

The dry retention pond in my "back yard" where I watched a unit's SH-60 belly flop in an emergency landing.

Lt. co-pilot calmly walked up to the house saying they had a bit of an electrical issue and needed to use a phone...

And on great Saturday, a long sunny day outside, I noticed that one by one, everyone had pretty suddenly stopped

cutting their grass, and a hundred people had come out of their homes and

were looking down the street towards the southern end of the flight line where

we all witnessed our first Harrier hovering, almost silently.

Kinda like the time in SC we all watched the B2 stealth bomber circle overhead silently,  creepy.

The base telephones lit up after both of those sightings with people who thought it was an alien invasion.

 
 

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