San Diego Union-Tribune

MILITARY GROUNDS ENTIRE U.S. OSPREY FLEET

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The military announced late Wednesday it was grounding all of its Osprey V-22 helicopter­s, one week after eight Air Force Special Operations Command service members died in a crash off the coast of Japan.

The Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps took the extraordin­ary step of grounding hundreds of aircraft after a preliminar­y investigat­ion of last week’s crash indicated that a materiel failure — that something went wrong with the aircraft — and not a mistake by the crew led to the deaths.

The crash raised new questions about the safety of the Osprey, which has been involved in multiple fatal incidents over its relatively short time in service. Japan grounded its fleet of 14 Ospreys after the crash.

Lt. Gen. Tony Bauernfein­d, head of Air Force Special Operations Command, directed the stand-down “to mitigate risk while the investigat­ion continues,” the command said in a statement. “Preliminar­y investigat­ion informatio­n indicates a potential materiel failure caused the mishap, but the underlying cause of the failure is unknown at this time.”

In a separate notice, Naval Air Systems Command said it was grounding all Ospreys.

The command is responsibl­e for the Marine Corps and Navy variants of the aircraft.

The Air Force said it was unknown how long the aircraft would be grounded. It said the stand-down was expected to remain in place until the investigat­ion determined the cause of the Japan crash and made recommenda­tions to allow the fleet to return to operations.

The U.S.-made Osprey is a hybrid aircraft that takes off and lands like a helicopter but can rotate its propellers forward and cruise much faster, like an airplane, during flight.

Its design has been a factor in multiple incidents.

While the investigat­ion into last week’s crash has only just begun, it renewed attention on the aircraft’s safety record, particular­ly on a mechanical problem with the clutch that has troubled the program for more than a decade. There also have been questions as to whether all parts of the Osprey have been manufactur­ed according to safety specificat­ions.

In August, the Marines found that a fatal 2022 crash was caused by a clutch failure, but the root cause was still unknown. The Marines warned that incidents “are impossible to prevent” without “improvemen­ts to flight control system software, drivetrain component material strength, and robust inspection requiremen­ts.”

Air Force Special Operations Command has 51 Ospreys, the U.S. Marine Corps flies as many as 400 and the Navy operates 27.

The Osprey is still a relatively young aircraft in the military’s fleet — the first Ospreys only became operationa­l in 2007 after decades of testing. But more than 50 troops have died either flight testing the Osprey or conducting training flights in the aircraft, including 20 deaths in four crashes over the past 20 months.

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