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We Shouldn't Be Surprised About the C-130 Crash!!

    (see a video that resume the article in the next page)

    A C-130 load plane worked by the Puerto Rico Air National Guard went down close Savannah, GA 
    amid a preparation mission today. The crash occurred around three miles east of Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport. Five were ready. No survivors were normal. [UPDATE: It is currently affirmed that no less than five were slaughtered in the crash.] 
    Examiners will now attempt to figure out what precisely turned out badly for this situation. In any case, this is what we definitely know: These sorts of military mishaps have become much excessively normal of late as a strained military is entrusted with keeping up an astoundingly old armada of planes. 

    We delved into this issue a month ago after the most recent in a rash of military mischances. Such mishaps are up 40 percent since 2013, which just so happens to be the point at which the monetary allowance cutting Sequestration became effective. 

    Regardless of whether you're discussing a load plane like the C-130, an aircraft like the B-52, an assault plane like the A-10, or a warrior like the F/A-18, the U.S. military is keeping it planes flying for a considerable length of time upon decades, any longer than their starting point arranged lifetimes, to the point that there's currently a go-to joke about pilots dealing with the exceptionally same planes their granddads overhauled. The rebel, dependable C-130 has been flying in some shape since the 1950s. 
    We'll update you as often as possible as agents endeavor to decide the mechanical reason for this C-130 crash. Be that as it may, the evident underlying driver isn't leaving. 

    An aggregate of nine individuals were ready. The AP portrays the crash accordingly: 

    The tremendous plane's fuselage seemed to have struck the middle, and bits of its 132-foot wingspan were scattered crosswise over paths in the two bearings. The main part still in place was the tail area, said Chris Hanks, a representative for the Savannah Professional Firefighters Association. "It supernaturally did not hit any autos, any homes," Effingham County Sheriff's representative Gena Bilbo said. "This is an exceptionally bustling roadway." 



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