Mar 05, 2015 · The vintage aircraft, a 1942 Ryan Aeronautical ST3KR, landed right-side up and largely intact after leaving gouges on the golf course fairway. There was no fire or explosion. Harrison Ford 25 photos
2015: Crash Landing on a Golf Course Harrison Ford was injured in 2015 when after hastily landing his World War II-era two-seater plane onto the green at Penmar Golf Course in southern California.Jun 24, 2021
The star of Harrison's hanger is his twin-engine $18.8 million Citation Sovereign jet, which is capable of a 3,200 nautical mile range and a top speed of 525mph – not the Millennium Falcon, but not far off.Jul 13, 2020
Harrison FordIn 2015, Harrison Ford crash-landed his plane on the 8th hole at Penmar Golf Course.Feb 17, 2020
Harrison Ford is both a hero on the screen and off the screen. The 77-year-old movie star and 800-acre Teton County ranch owner is a volunteer search and rescue helicopter pilot who's saved stranded hikers on more than one occasion.Jun 23, 2020
While the 59-year-old actor, who is a certified pilot, does fly a P-51 propeller-driven fighter plane and a few helicopters in the film, he was denied permission by the navy to fly an F-18 Fighter Jet. While the F-18 jet does feature in Top Gun: Maverick, the scenes were filmed with the assistance of Navy pilots.Mar 30, 2022
LOS ANGELES — The Federal Aviation Administration announced on Thursday that it had cleared Harrison Ford to continue flying, after the actor completed remedial training prompted by an incident in April when he had crossed a runway by accident. Mr.Sep 24, 2020
In 2017 Ford escaped sanction after mistakenly landing his plane on a US airport taxiway, narrowly missing an airliner carrying more than 100 people. Shortly after the incident the actor acknowledged his mistake in a phone call to air traffic control.May 1, 2020
79 years (July 13, 1942)Harrison Ford / Age
It was five years ago that actor Harrison Ford crash landed his PT-22 trainer plane on a golf course in Los Angeles. "He did a fantastic job landing it," said John Roper, president of the Airline History Museum.Jun 30, 2020
two crashesThe actor has in the past spoken of his love of flying but has had several aviation mishaps, including two crashes.Apr 30, 2020
In February 2017, Ford flew over a passenger plane at a California airport and then landed on a taxiway instead of the runway. The actor wasn't fined and didn't lose his pilot's license as a result of the incident.Sep 24, 2020
Historians generally point to the Depression and a need to concentrate on his auto business as reasons for the “motor king's” retreat from aviation, while some of his contemporaries never thought he had the same passion for airplanes that his son Edsel did.Mar 1, 2018
Harrison Ford was flying a vintage model of such a plane, known commercially as the Ryan Aeronautical ST3KR, when he lost engine power on Thursday and ditched on a golf course in Los Angeles, resulting in a broken arm and a gash to the head.
RELATED: Harrison Ford ‘Saved Several Lives’ by Avoiding Suburbs in Plane Crash. Ford’s plane was built in 1942, according to Federal Aviation Administration records — the year he was born. It was certified as airworthy through October of this year. It was so well-kept that Patrick Jones, an investigator with the National Transportation Safety ...
Before you could pilot a bomber or a transport plane for the Army in World War II, you had to learn the basics of flight. And if you showed up as a cadet in 1942, you might very well have trained on what was known as the PT-22.
A Ryan PT-22 Recruit at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton, Ohio. National Museum of the U.S. Air Force.
Training on one was not a simple matter. It took eight to nine months on the PT-22, for those who didn’t wash out, and that was before the Army would let a young airman near a specialized craft like a bomber.
The Army liked the plane’s updated Kinner radial engine, which it believed would stand the rigors of training better than previous designs, according to a reference guide published by Jane’s, a British company that specializes in military and aviation information.
Harrison Ford was investigated by the Federal Aviation Administration after landing his yellow Aviat Husky plane on a taxiway at the John Wayne Airport in 2017. Mistakenly taking the taxiway for a runway, Ford flew directly over -- and narrowly missed hitting -- an American Airlines 737 airliner that was carrying over 100 passengers.
After taking off from the nearby Santa Monica Airport, Ford reported engine failure shortly after chose to crash-land at the golf course. He emerged from the wreckage with a broken arm and head injuries and was taken away in a stretcher.
In 2001, Harrison Ford found and rescued Cody Clawson, a 13-year-old boy scout who went missing in Yellowstone National Park. Clawson had been missing for 19 hours when Ford set out to find him along with a large rescue team. In the end, It was Ford himself who spotted Clawson at the bottom of the hill.
Imagine that moment: a smoky fire, surrounded by chaos and flames. And while nervously awaiting rescue, the hand that reaches out to you from the chopper is Han Solo. (Or Indiana Jones, if you prefer.) Pretty awesome.
Even in 2020, the 77-year-old pilot was still flying. And making mistakes. Last spring, Harrison Ford landed at the Hawthorne Airport outside Los Angeles when a tower instructed him, clearly, to wait for another aircraft to make a touch-and-go landing before Ford could taxi across the runway. Ford did not. And was reamed out by the air traffic controller for it. Although there was no danger of a crash according to the F.A.A., Ford's publicist revealed that the actor did apologize and own up to the mistake.
How hero pilot Harrison Ford crash landed his vintage plane on a golf course to avoid catastrophe over homes. Actor was flying a vintage plane in Venice, California on Thursday. Ford, 72, was transported to a Santa Monica hospital with serious but non-life threatening injuries including a broken ankle and pelvis.
Crash land: Actor Harrison Ford was rushed to the hospital on Thursday after crashing a vintage plane on a Venice, California golf course. Engine failure: In air traffic control audio, a calm Ford said that his engine failed as he asked for permission to land.
As soon as reports confirmed Harrison Ford is expected to make a full recovery, fans took to Twitter to inject some humor into the situation, making references to his most famous roles.
'May all his future flights be green-screen!,' tweeted the 63-year-old actor who plays Luke Skywalker in the film franchise.
Ford's publicist Ina Treciokas said on Thursday that the actor had no other choice but to make an emergency landing. In a statement, she said: 'Harrison was flying a WW2 vintage plane today which stalled upon takeoff. He had no other choice but to make an emergency landing, which he did safely.