Archived material Access restricted Article
Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of Fri 10/07/2011 View Thu 10/06/2011 View Wed 10/05/2011 View Tue 10/04/2011 View Mon 10/03/2011 View Sun 10/02/2011 View Sat 10/01/2011
1
2011-10-07 Europe
US Airborne Catastrophe In Hohenfelz - 47 Injured
Archived material is restricted to Rantburg regulars and members. If you need access email fred.pruitt=at=gmail.com with your nick to be added to the members list. There is no charge to join Rantburg as a member.
Posted by Anonymoose 2011-10-07 19:14|| || Front Page|| [6 views ]  Top

#1 
The American army said the drop was part of a scheme to switch the military focus back to fighting conventional forces as operations in Iraq and Afghanistan wind down.

It is unclear what precisley happened to cause the numerous injuries.


I suspect it has to do with the previously neglected conventional training.
Posted by Thing From Snowy Mountain 2011-10-07 19:47||   2011-10-07 19:47|| Front Page Top

#2 Oh, maybe something like this [check at 5:00].
Posted by Procopius2k 2011-10-07 20:01||   2011-10-07 20:01|| Front Page Top

#3 She explained an injury rate of up to 3 per cent is normal in this type of exercise
OK, so 1000-47=953, 953/1000= 95.3%. 100%-95.3%= 4.7%, which, last time i looked was greater than 3%. So i think that should call for an investigation. Starting with Denver's math skills.
Posted by USN, Ret. 2011-10-07 20:18||   2011-10-07 20:18|| Front Page Top

#4 You're right, USN Ret. She should have stated that in terms of mean, standard deviation and confidence levels.

Although, that would tend to have us talking in terms of fractional persons/injuries. But it would be mathematically correct.
Posted by lotp 2011-10-07 20:50||   2011-10-07 20:50|| Front Page Top

#5 Sounds like a chalk got blown into the trees or a boulder field.

It happens. Gusts come up and play hell with the drop. 47 isn't too bad, actually.

In airborne school, we had an entire stick get blown into the trees and sent several guys to the hospital with broken legs and hips. Unexpected wind gust.
Posted by DarthVader 2011-10-07 20:56||   2011-10-07 20:56|| Front Page Top

#6 Training injuries and deaths have gone down in the last 10 years as this type of training was put aside to train for Iraq and Afghanistan. One of my greatest worries while in the Artillery was being squashed by a Tracked or wheeled vehicle while sleeping near the TOC. This was in the days well before night vision goggles.
Posted by tipover 2011-10-07 21:05||   2011-10-07 21:05|| Front Page Top

#7 This sort of incident happens - and will continue to happen - unless and until the military gets so risk adverse that they eliminate all risky training.

Paratroopers get extra "hazardous duty pay" every month, and each trooper is at least a double volunteer - once for the Army, and once for the Airborne.

A good friend of mine died in a similar event in 1982: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,922840,00.html

My own "worst jump" was in February 17979, while serving with the 2/235th Inf (Abn) - jumping onto Arrowhead Drop Zone at Ft. Chaffee, Arkansas. We jumped one company from three CH-47 Chinook helicopters. It was about 20 degrees F on the ground, and we should have been jumping while wearing gloves. But - this meant that ripcord grips on the reserve parachutes had to be "reversed" so that there was enough space for a gloved hand to get a grip on the handle. Some genius had failed to order the reserve parachutes to come in "winterized" configuration - so we were ordered to jump without gloves.

And - we did. When you exit the aircraft that is going at about 100 miles an hour into cold air - and even though it was tailgate jump - it takes only about 30 seconds for you hands to chill to the point of almost losing feeling. And - it becomes almost impossible to exert force while "pinching" with your thumb and index finger.

But - jumping with the T-10 or MC1-1 chutes we had then - the only way to EASILY collapse your chute once you were on the ground was to "pop" a capewell - which is a spring-loaded protective cover that holds the parachute shroud lies from one side of the chute together, and fastens them to the parachute harness.

To "pop" a capewell, you have to pinch together two spring loaded clips.

By the time we reached the ground, no one could exert the necessary pinching force. So - about 90 paratroopers started being dragged across the drop zone by their still inflated chutes - driven by a wind of maybe 10-12 mph. This was over frozen ground with large rocks sticking out of it - it was formerly a glacier field of the Ozark mountains.

I got dragged maybe 100 yards, and then manage to pop one capewell by using both hands - pushing together using my knuckles.

Other troopers got dragged 350 yards, until they got pulled into the treeline that formed one edge of the drop zone. There was debris all over the drop zone - because we had jumped "combat equipment" - which meant rucksacks full of food, water ammunition, and personal gear - which we lowered on bungee cords below us, while descending - so that this weight would hit the ground first, and reduce our impact momentum. But - while being dragged on the ground, your rucksack dragged behind you, and many of the outer pockets eventually got ripped open - so that the path that you dragged along the ground was traced by all the stuff that "leaked" from your rucksack.

It was a long morning. I was a platoon leader - I think I jumped 26 men plus myself - I think only about 18 of us limped off the dropzone and were able to continue with the mission.

But - no one was killed - and I think there were only about ten broken bones in the company - plus a handful of concussions.

It was just another day in paradise for all of us. Somebody probably got in trouble for the logistics error. At troop level, everyone just grumbled and drove on. Not that big a deal - that's why we got extra jump pay.
Posted by Lone Ranger 2011-10-07 21:15||   2011-10-07 21:15|| Front Page Top

#8 Looking through an old issue of the Smithsonian Air and Space Magazine (Sep 2007, p. 78) there is an art re: chute upgrades (T-11)to support a weight of 400# vs 250 for the (T-10). According to this, 10,000 of the T-11's were to be in place by 2010.
Whatever the cause, pray for speedy and full recoveries for our troops.
Posted by USN, Ret. 2011-10-07 21:37||   2011-10-07 21:37|| Front Page Top

#9 Weather in Bavaria on Wednesday was sunny, warm, but with gusty winds
Posted by European Conservative 2011-10-07 22:43||   2011-10-07 22:43|| Front Page Top

23:14 Eric Jablow
23:13 rammer
22:57 Sping Panda9115
22:44 JosephMendiola
22:43 European Conservative
22:41 Procopius2k
22:40 Procopius2k
22:23 JosephMendiola
22:12 JosephMendiola
21:53 JosephMendiola
21:44 JosephMendiola
21:43 SteveS
21:41 Perfesser
21:39 Perfesser
21:37 USN, Ret.
21:36 Perfesser
21:25 JosephMendiola
21:15 Lone Ranger
21:09 JosephMendiola
21:09 Frank G
21:08 Frank G
21:05 tipover
21:01 JosephMendiola
21:00 JosephMendiola









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com