African Pilot

Rafale ride ejection by passenger

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A French military report says the ride in a French Air Force Rafale B didn’t go as planned when an overstress­ed back-seat passenger inadverten­tly ejected from the two-seat fighter and the aircraft was saved only because of a previously undetected flaw that prevented the pilot’s ejection.

According to the report published on 6 April 6 the French military’s air accident investigat­ion office, during March 2019 the back-seat passenger on a flight from Saint Dizier, France was a 64-year-old contractor responsibl­e for the test activity of a French armaments company. When the passenger arrived in Saint Dizier the evening before the flight, he was unaware that his colleagues had arranged a special, back-seat ride in the French Air Force’s most advanced fighter. His colleagues, who included a former French Air Force pilot, wanted to make the flight a surprise, but they did not count on the prospectiv­e passenger’s reaction. According to a translated copy of the French-language report, the passenger ‘never expressed a desire to carry out this type of flight and in particular, in a Rafale.’

Because the gesture was meant as a surprise, the passenger was informed only hours before the flight, leaving little time for him to prepare. The passenger did not feel he could decline the gesture, bowing to the social pressure imposed by his colleagues. A required, pre-flight medical examinatio­n resulted in a recommenda­tion by the doctor to limit any manoeuvre forces to less than 3gs.

However, an office electronic system failure prevented the doctor’s guidance from being relayed to the passenger or the pilot of the Rafale involved in the mishap.

The hastily arranged surprise also meant that the passenger had to hitch a ride on whatever flight was already arranged on that day, which was a routine patrol mission by three aircraft. Such missions include a standard climb immediatel­y after take-off with loads greater than 4.5gs.

The passenger appeared enthusiast­ic to the pilot as he climbed into his cockpit, but there were signs that he was overstress­ed. The passenger’s wristwatch recorded his heart beats per minute. The maximum heart

rate for a man of his age is 156 beats per minute, but his was racing from 136 to 142 as he seated himself. Perhaps due to the stress, the passenger failed to properly buckle in. The back side of his shoulder strap allowed more motion than necessary. In addition, he did not fasten the right leg of his pressure suit, lower the helmet visor, or snap the chin strap of his helmet.

The passenger’s experience in the back seat of the Rafale would be brief. As the pilot rotated on take-off, the Rafale rapidly developed aerodynami­c loads over 4.5gs. Within about 10 seconds of rotation, the pilot levelled off quickly, causing the loads to invert to negative 0.63gs. The shocked passenger, whose loose shoulder straps may have allowed him to start floating upward, reached for a handle, which happened to be the mechanism that causes his seat to eject. Because the passenger had failed to lower his visor and fasten his chin strap, the exposure to the 200-knot air flow outside the aircraft caused his helmet to fly off. Besides minor injuries to his face, the passenger landed safely by the runway after his parachute opened at around 2,000 feet. The passenger’s inadverten­t ejection command could have been disastrous for the aircraft. The two-seat version of the Rafale allows the pilot to select between two options: ‘1’ allows only a single seat to eject when one handle is pulled and ‘2’ commands both seats to eject when only one is pulled. The pilot had selected the ‘2’ option for this flight, meaning the pilot’s seat was also supposed to eject.

The ejection sequence proceeded normally, with the canopy of both seats shattering and the back-seat firing. However, the explosive charge connected to the front seat never received a command to fire. As a result, the pilot remained on board the aircraft, albeit with a missing canopy and back seat. The pilot dumped fuel and returned to Saint Dizier to land and the aircraft was secured for 24 hours until the front seat’s explosive charge could be disarmed.

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