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-   -   Falklands Crash Sites (https://www.pprune.org/aviation-history-nostalgia/297920-falklands-crash-sites.html)

sycamore 17th May 2011 20:33

PR01, abject apologies for not picking up on your earlier request; I`m trying to contact `Scroggs` the Mod,as he was doing the Airbridge and may have further details.One of the pilots of the S-K was an ex stude of mine from RNEFTS..

Edmund Spencer 17th May 2011 23:53

J.
I don't read Spanish but it looks like the contributor thinks Castillo was in C430. This is not so. The wreckage on Pebble Island was Raul Diaz' C430.
Both Castillo (C419) and Puga (C410) went down in the sea well to the north of the island.
Best regards

jualbo 19th May 2011 16:05

Hi Edmund:
You´re right. He thought it was as you said, but I explained him the same than you´ve wroten. By the way, the photo with a turbine inside the fouselagge and the port wing joined, is from C-430 or from C-437? There is another one where a turbine is seen alone. Is it the same canibalished or it´s from the other Dagger?

Regards

Kilonovember52 22nd May 2011 19:19

27 June – An RAFLockheed Hercules C.1P, XV206, of 1312 Flight, and a Royal NavyWestland Sea King HAS5, XZ919, helicopter of 826 Naval Air Squadron, collide in cloud north of the Falkland Islands, at around 300 ft. The Hercules lost the wing beyond its #1 (port outer) engine but still managed to land. The Sea King, based at RNAS Culdrose, was lost and all four on board killed.



Thursday,27 June 1985


FAA, 826b Squadron, Seahawk, flying Sea King operating from RFA, air crash in Falkland Islands
HAYES, Duncan I A, Lieutenant (P), C027691E
RODWELL, Simon J, Lieutenant (P), C026512T
SIMPSON, Robert C, Lieutenant Commander, C021831U
SUMMERS, Paul C, Leading Aircrewman (O), D187469P

See also:

Two mid-air collisions [Archive] - PPRuNe Forums

PR01 23rd May 2011 18:04

Hercules/Sea King mid air, N Falklands
 
sycamore and kilonovenber52 - Many thanks for this information re mid air Herc/RN Seaking 27 Jun 85. Can I ask, in ORAC's blog, what does 'IMC' mean? I am but a simple sailor here... so please hit me around the head with the blindingly obvious .... Re RN aircrew lost, Simon Rodwell was the pal I referred to earlier...

India Four Two 24th May 2011 00:35

PRO1,

IMC = Instrument Meteorological Conditions. Clouds in this case, but can also be low visibility.

Instrument flight rules - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cornerstone958 25th May 2011 10:42

25th May 1982 HMS Coventry RIP
CS

sycamore 25th May 2011 16:30

PR01, Paul,sorry I`d been misinformed about the S-K crew details; I didn`t know any on board that aircraft..Syc..

PR01 28th May 2011 21:04

Seaking/Hurcules mid air
 
India Four Two, thanks for making this clearer.
Paul

nazca_steve 30th Jul 2013 21:22

Hello all,

Open question to all here that have visited the Falklands since the war. Does anyone remember seeing aircraft wreckage around Whale Point? This is the string of small islands and lagoons south of Fitzroy. I can provide a map link if necessary.

I have solid info on this but am curious to know if others know of it, especially from previous years.

Regards to all.

Steve

davaar lad 20th Mar 2014 20:17

Seaking - Hercules mid air 1986
 
Paul, I remember all too well the accident to which you refer. I was on 826 A Flight and we took over from B Flight on board RFA RELIANT. It was a sad sorry time which was made worse by the fact that we all knew there had been a cock up. It was a rubbish job doing the SOULANT Roulement then towed array patrols up north when we were not down south. It was made easier by the fact that all the guys on A,B and C flights were great guys. I knew Simon well not only did we do some of our flying training together but we also shared the same crew room at 826. The inquiry exonerated the C130 crew of any blame it if I remember rightly the radar operator ashore came in for some criticism.

hoteljuliet 7th Oct 2016 17:34

XZ919 Collision with C130 FIPZ Thursday, 27 June 1985
 
I was the Communications Officer on watch onboard RFA Reliant at the time of the incident.

It was a very sad time I will never forget.

I remember that trip was 5 months long, most of it at sea. There was a good team spirit onboard and we had a badminton court in the vessel's hold.

I wrote a poem in B Flt's Line Book, hope it's still there.

Best regards

Pali 9th Oct 2016 10:18

This is probably one of the finest PPRuNe threads ever. Reading a discussion of once opposing members of armed forces with so much respect and courtesy gave me a lot hope regarding humanity. I will sleep better tonight.

Marcantilan 9th May 2018 23:46

Sorry for resurrecting this old thread.

Just a question, anyone is aware of an Argentine helicopter wreck around or in the vicinity of Port Pleasant ?

Thanks in advance,

BuddhaXG 14th Oct 2020 11:12

I picked up the Spanish version on Zone Militar, I was the man on the ground you were in contact with, the main group remained in the hills. l and another colleague had come forward to the area we were told you would be using as the firing point. When you fired we were in your 7 o'clock about 200m from you.

I warned you on your approach of two argy helicopters which had taken off from the airport but heading south, you asked if we could cover you which I said we could (although Im sure you thought we had stingers in our belt kit, which we didnt).

You unleashed a storm of artillery and anti aircraft cannon fire which coloured the sky for several minutes but they didnt know exactly where the rockets came from, it was good to see you make a successful escape into the mist.

Bob Farmer 8th Feb 2022 09:08

UNKNOWN CRASH SITE
 
I stumbled across this forum after searching for a map of known Argentine aircraft crash sites in the Falkland Islands. I may be barking up the wrong tree but I was stationed in the Falklands in late 1984 and used to spend a lot of time exploring the Goose Green settlement and Argentine positions along Darwin and the far end of the isthmus around the suspension bridge between the main East Island and Lafonia. Just South East of Goose Green I found some aircraft parts on a flat isolated area not far from the bridge and approximately 100m from the shoreline. There was very little visible but I did pick up a section of the tail with a partial Argentine national flag. This was subsequently confiscated onboard the Canberra in March 1985 and thrown into the sea by the RMP doing searches.
I have always wondered if this was a recorded crash site and as a young lad it never occured to me that this may well have been the last resting place of a pilot. Having spoken to a few collector colleagues recently, I wondered if anyone had ever documented a site near Goose Green other than the Pucara of Thomba.
If no one is able to give me any help or has any corroberating evidence, would anyone know who I should report this to?
Kindest regards, Bob

ARXW 23rd May 2023 20:01

Hello

there is not much footage of the Falklands War that I haven't watched over the years (or so I thought) but can anyone recognise the incident at 27:09 of the documentary below on the Falklands War? It seems to show a fast mover crashing to the ground.


Self loading bear 24th May 2023 06:54

There is no link

India Four Two 24th May 2023 07:06

Slb,

There is a bug in the software used by PPRuNe. If you can't see the link, click the Quote button at the bottom right and copy the link from the page that shows up.


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