
That brute force was, in no uncertain terms, considered a necessity for the Air Force as it pursued development of what would become America’s Eagle in the 1960s. Aerial footage from NBC San Diego's SkyRanger 7 showed the plane was missing half of its right wing, with a chunk of the aircraft lodged in the back of an SUV and another part of the plane on the. Sucks to say, but it's true - in most cases, suffering heavy rudder, elevator, or wing damage is basically a death, whether it's instant or not. In fact, this aircraft is so capableand powerfulthat a pilot once flew an F-15 ten miles and then landed it, all after losing the aircraft’s entire right wing. It's a matter of yes, you can still fly, of course, but should you still fly? I mean, if you're near enough ground targets or someone is foolish enough to fly straight in front of you and you can maintain control, by all means keep going, but otherwise? You're probably more useful abandoning that aircraft. When you sustain heavy enough damage, you're just sort of wasting time in most cases by staying in the battle with that plane. Needless to say i ended up crashing.but yeah.you CAN fly with massive s just not going to last very long and your better off in arcade battles just holding J and leaving to get on another plane you can be productive in. The mishap occurred in 1965, during the Viet Nam war. It was a miracle were the only words a Pan Am pilot could find to describe landing his plane safely after a wing fell off and the plane caught fire in mid air.

Ive done it, and ive flown in circles with tons of damage an unable to do anything but fly in a gimped circle and shoot anyone who flew across my front end. With Part of The Wing Missing, This 707 STILL Made a Miracle Landing. Originally posted by CyberDown:i mean you can still fly.but your not going to be very useful.unless of course someone happens to stay in front of you enough to shoot it.
