Montexn wrote:
F14D_Tomcat wrote:
Ever since the famous Frecce Tricolori deadly crash at Ramstein AFB in 1988 (which I narrowly escaped), all air shows that took place at the various US bases here and opened to the general public were terminated.
@Tomcat...this sounds like a story in the making....narrowly escaped? By that, would I be correct in assuming you were there when that happened?

Yes, I was there. And I will never forget.
A typical AFB open day like I love them...and miss them.
We were lucky enough to have a gorgeous and warm day, like you seldom have at northern Germany in late August. Having left Switzerland around 4 am, we managed (my friend and I, plus 2 girls who had come along out of curiosity of the event) to be by the entrance gates (The Pearly Gates for me, if you know what I mean) at 9 am greeted by smiling MPs. We were directed in a very orderly fashion to our parking place. By experience, my friend and I knew that we had to put in good use the hour/hour and a half we had before the show started around 10/10:30 and before the arrival of the bulk of visitors (over 350'000 that day) to take pictures of the aircraft at static without being bothered.
Having done that, we proceeded along the runway in order to find a good spot to follow the air show and continue to take pictures (unfortunately I cannot post them here since no digital cameras were available at the time). The place was becoming crowded with entire families having taken place literally feet from the taxiway and about a 100 feet from the main runway. Remember, that was before 9/11, so no terrorists or anything similar was in the organizers' mind. Food, drink and memorabilia stands were everywhere. I still remember the juicy hamburgers on the grills or the ice cold Dr. Peppers in the fridges (actually, it was during one of those Air shows that I first tasted a soft drink that was to become my favorite: Dr. Pepper).
Then the show started. Phantom, Starfighter, Eagle, Falcon, Warthog, Hercules, Harrier, Bronco, Galaxy, Chinook, Lynx, Super Stallion, etc were some of the aircraft that performed in the morning. Then, there was a pause to give spectators the chance to visit the various stands. In the evening, it was the turn of the aerobatic teams. Some of the best were present: Red Arrows, Patrouille de France and Frecce Tricolori among some.
Then, the fatal moment came. The Frecce Tricolori with Aermacchis MB339B, the most crazy and most audacious aerobatic team in the world and the one that uses the highest number of aircraft (10) of any other team, was about to finish their show. They were performing a figure called "The Arrow in the Heart". This figure consists of two groups, one with 4 and the other with 5 aircraft that each performs half of a heart. The solo (and 10th aircraft) performs a heart-piercing figure and has to cross the other 9. You can easily understand that timing is crucial for this figure. It was performed hundreds of times in practice and at shows around the world. With no incident. Until that fatal day of August 28, 2008. It must have been around 3:30 pm and it was the last aerobatic team to perform before the Red Arrows who always close the show. As the solo was entering the "heart" he was too low and too fast. He hit the leading aircraft of the left formation of the heart on the tail, which in turn spiraled out of control and hitting his lower left teammate. All three pilots were killed, the first one ejected but his parachute did not open, the second crashed in a Medevac Black Hawk and the third died instantly as his plane crashed in a fireball just in front of the spectators. It had just followed its trajectory into the crowd.
70 people died that day and more than 500 injured as Jet-A fuel and shrapnel from the downed Aermacchi scattered into the capacity crowd. Fire fighters were almost instantly on the spot. Ambulances followed them shortly afterwords. Over half of the dead was killed instantly, while the rest of the fatalities occurred in the following days, mostly of burns.
My party and I were standing maybe 150 feet from impact of the downed aircraft. It is amazing how the human brain reacts in situations like these. For some milliseconds, no one moved, then slowly, we realized what had happened. We praised the Lord we (my friend and I) had insisted of walking a bit towards the end of the runway, to avoid the very crowded center portions of the airfield. If it were for the girls, we would certainly be among the victims. They had reluctantly agreed to walk a bit further down. I cannot say that there was a major panic generated by the crash, maybe because emergency units arrived at the crash site almost instantly, like they were trained to do, only this time it was not an exercise.
Everybody was heading towards the exit now but that generated a huge bottle neck. Normally, when people leave, it is done by waves, not everyone leaves at the same time. Emergency calls on the loudspeakers were asking for car pharmacies because the base was not prepared for so many wounded to be taken care of. And by the time I was nearing the exit, they were looking for volunteers to give blood. Which I gave. Medics were glad to hear that I belonged to the O+ group.
Needless to say that I was home largely after midnight. So, I spent the nite at my friend's because I had more than a 2-hour drive for my place. There were no cells of course at that time.
Normally, nobody talks about Air Shows on the news. But the death toll was so high, that it was the first thing that every news bulletin talked about. Even in Greece, where my parents watched, too. They knew of course that I was at Ramstein. I never called them because I never thought that they had heard. They spent the nite awake, not knowing if I was dead or alive. I let you imagine the scene when I called them the following morning to tell them I was not home but at my friend's. Having arrived around 1 am, I did not call them because I did not want to wake them up.
After that accident, all Air Shows in Germany were postponed for at least two years. But they never really recovered. I think that now Air Shoes are reserved only to the families of the men and women that serve on the base.
Here's a video of the crash:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IH5uvog4rS4&feature=related