US Missing F-35 fighter jet disappears over South Carolina after pilot ejects in 'mishap' - The pilot parachuted over South Carolina but their fighter jet still hasn't been found by authorities. (Find my Iphone feature not enabled)

Missing F-35 fighter jet disappears over South Carolina after pilot ejects in 'mishap'


The United States Marine Corps has launched a full investigation after an F-35 fighter jet has gone missing after a plot ejected over South Carolina.

The pilot was in a Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort F-35 when the incident occurred on Sunday, according to a spokesperson for the Marine Corps.

The pilot ejected over North Charleston, South Carolina at around 2pm. He was taken to a local hospital where he was in stable condition, said Major Melanie Salinas. The pilot’s name has not been released.

Based on the missing plane’s location and trajectory, the search for the F-35 Lightning II jet was focused on Lake Moultrie and Lake Marion, said Senior Master Sgt. Heather Stanton at Joint Base Charleston. Both lakes are north of North Charleston.

A South Carolina Law Enforcement Division helicopter joined the search for the F-35 after some bad weather cleared in the area, Stanton said. Military officials appealed in online posts Sunday for any help from the public in locating the aircraft.
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F-35 planeThe F-35 is manufactured by Lockheed Martin (Image: Getty)

Given that the pilot was engaging in a "military exercise" at the time of the disappearance of the F-35 fighter jet, speculation continues to abound about what, exactly, the pilots were doing in the area. Officials are still investigating why the pilot ejected, authorities said.

The pilot of a second F-35 returned safely to Joint Base Charleston, Salinas said. The planes and pilots were with the Marine Fighter Attack Training Squadron 501 based in Beaufort, not far from South Carolina’s Atlantic coast.

Officials have asked for the public's assistance in finding the downed jet, something which local Congresswoman Nacy Mace blasted on social media.

Joint Base Charleston said in a tweet: "We’re working with MCASBeaufortSC to locate an F-35 that was involved in a mishap this afternoon. The pilot ejected safely. If you have any information that may help our recovery teams locate the F-35, please call the Base Defense Operations Center at 843-963-3600."

Nancy Mace responded: "How in the hell do you lose an F-35? How is there not a tracking device and we’re asking the public to what, find a jet and turn it in?"
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F-35 JetThe F-35 jet was still missing late Sunday afternoon (Image: Getty)

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Daily Express US has reached out to a representative for the United States Marine Corps for comment.

Officially known as the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II, the missing fighter jet is part of a family of stealth multirole combat aircraft.

Considered one of the elite fighter jets, these stealth bombers are an essential tool of war for the American military.

Joint Base Charleston is a huge 20,000-acre base and shares space - including runways - with Charleston International.

Around 10,000 active service members live on the enormous base.

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Source : https://www.express.co.uk/news/us/1813898/breaking-marine-pilot-ejects-f35-charleston
 
I kind of love how the guy set it to autopilot and THEN ejected.

Kind of interested in "why" he would do that.
This is what I’m asking. Why do that?
Did he set it before he ejected and if so why and to what. Or was it set outside his control and he then ejected. Ie hacked
Setting it before you’re ejected seems to imply either:
1. You’re flying it to crash in a specific place for pickup
2. You know it’s wounded and is going down and you set it to somewhere sparsely populated to avoid casualties.
I don’t know much about jets. If you’re hit or hurt do you generally have time to pop the autopilot on in a bad scenario or do you just point it somewhere and press the big red button? If it’s not badly hurt aren’t you trained to land the thing if it’s just been dinged? Walk me through this, you know your stuff. What’s your opinion?
Imagine if it’s a militia, the repercussions will be immense
 
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Saw this floating around either fedi or twitter. A slightly different flavor of scitzopost, but a hack seems slightly more likely than some fudd militia picking off a top of the line fighter with a high powered rifle.:thinking:
I honestly think the diversity hire pilot panicked and either accidently ejected, or thought he was about to crash and bailed.
More likely that the 'pings' they heard were some form of hydraulic or fuel lines pinging off of the connectors under pressure. Though if that or a hack were the cause, we would see grounding of every F-35, including the European variants.

Though as @teriyakiburns stated earlier, it's most probably a bird strike, especially hovering in an area that is sparsely populated. Avian suicide by turbine is all too common.
This is what I’m asking. Why do that?
Did he set it before he ejected and if so why and to what. Or was it set outside his control and he then ejected.
Standard protocol in the event of an ejection - if it isn't one due to enemy fire, catastrophic failure or the result of dicking about that is going to slam you into a mountain, is to either; point the aircraft straight and level (over open terrain) or point it at the ground/mountain/away from school and orphanages.

If this wasn't a catastrophic failure but the plane was going down, the pilot would have slapped on auto-pilot for the plane to fly clear of his landing post-ejection, knowing it would slam down a short distance later.

It would be interesting to know if the F-35 was hovering over water. Terrain following RADAR + water does not mix well.
 
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I want a list of all the shit the goverment has just lost. Like all the guns they lost during "Fast and Furious"
Even if you were given that list, you could read it non-stop, 24 hours a day, for the rest of your life, and you wouldn't reach the halfway mark.

As someone's whose been ordered to lose things... ... ... There's a metric fuck ton of UXOs and probably bodies in the water at Kanohoe Bay.
 
:thinking:
I honestly think the diversity hire pilot panicked and either accidently ejected, or thought he was about to crash and bailed.

Which could explain why they lost it. It just kept going. People are beginning to speculate that it just kept on going. Wonder which why it was heading?
 
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alright tweet it under ghost adventures let us know what you think.
how stupid can you be, the jet is supposedly very expensive and it has no tracking on it.
not even one button you can turn on to find it in a situation like this, so stealth it went full retard.

alright folks! if you see uncle sam in the sky make sure you call in at 1-800-fuck-america!
call 1-800-fuck-america now!

taliban finds the jet and takes it. canadian tranny squad finds it and takes it.
literally anyone finds this jet and just takes it.

america broadcasts how stupid they are AND WE CAN'T FIND IT AND IT'S FOR THE KEEPS YALL TO WHOEVER FINDS IT FIRST.
ONE EIGHT HUNDRED FUCK AMERICA!!!! THAT'S ONE EIGHT HUNDRED FUCK AMERICA NOW!
 
More likely that the 'pings' they heard were some form of hydraulic or fuel lines pinging off of the connectors under pressure. Though if that or a hack were the cause, we would see grounding of every F-35, including the European variants.

Though as @teriyakiburns stated earlier, it's most probably a bird strike, especially hovering in an area that is sparsely populated. Avian suicide by turbine is all too common.
You're probably right. I'm thinking this whole this was either some fault with the plane, pilot error and a hack being possible but the least likely thing.
 
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You're probably right. I'm thinking this whole this was either some fault with the plane, pilot error and a hack being possible but the least likely thing.
Don't be too hard on yourself. Not to PL but I was once part of a situation where a pilot said they had received small arms fire...at 30,000ft. It turns out that the "streaks of rounds and tracers" were just the sun reflecting at weird angles through the canopy.

Point is, pilots are under so much stress and pressure to do an extremely difficult job (3 different things at once) that it makes them almost brain-dead when it comes to doing anything that isn't flying. Their word on events while operating the craft is almost always hilariously bollocks.
 
You're probably right. I'm thinking this whole this was either some fault with the plane, pilot error and a hack being possible but the least likely thing.
Reliable info I've heard is that the plane was on final approach during bad weather when the pilot punched out.

Last year an F-35B was on final when it hit some wake turbulence from the aircraft ahead of it. The avionics then sperged out and the pilot had to eject. Perhaps the bad weather caused the avionics to shit itself like the wake turbulence issue. This would explain the emergency grounding.
 
Reliable info I've heard is that the plane was on final approach during bad weather when the pilot punched out.

Last year an F-35B was on final when it hit some wake turbulence from the aircraft ahead of it. The avionics then sperged out and the pilot had to eject. Perhaps the bad weather caused the avionics to shit itself like the wake turbulence issue. This would explain the emergency grounding.
A couple other F-35's have gone down, could be another computer glitch like that one.
Don't be too hard on yourself. Not to PL but I was once part of a situation where a pilot said they had received small arms fire...at 30,000ft. It turns out that the "streaks of rounds and tracers" were just the sun reflecting at weird angles through the canopy.

Point is, pilots are under so much stress and pressure to do an extremely difficult job (3 different things at once) that it makes them almost brain-dead when it comes to doing anything that isn't flying. Their word on events while operating the craft is almost always hilariously bollocks.
Damn. I wasn't even factoring fatigue or stress. Overtired pilots might explain all those UFO sightings. I doubt we'll ever get the official story, and even if the government straight up told us what happened, I'm pretty sure a good chunk of people wouldn't believe them just based on the fact it's coming from Biden's office.
 
"found in farmland with swamp"

first off those biomes aren't just called bogs or swamps, they are called fens and they are rare and dying off from human advancement.
it's shitty that plane remains and fuel have been dumped there, and it wasn't even for a pilot to land safely on wild terrain it was an unmanned jet destroying
rare flora because no one knew where it went and couldn't remote control it to land elsewhere like the desert.

second, i live in a giant fen so i guess this plane could've been crashing into my yard instead of south carolina if it wanted to, i'm east coast. how delightful.
no joke it could be my yard that thing crashed into, or your mom's house. it was just flying the fuck around to kill people where it landed.
 
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