Ollie wrote:
The fact is that the three Mentors were used as mock-dogfighters and thus were not handled as carefully as they should have. Those planes are pretty rugged, but like anything, it'll break at some point if it's being abused.
That in itself is no reason. The USAF has been flying T-38s as fighter lead-in aircraft for the better part of 30 years. We teach dogfighting day in and day out in them -- in an airplane that was designed to teach the same type of training that the T-34 did back in the day.
We absolutely beat the crap out of these jets -- snatching the stick full aft to the seat-pan at 320 knots, 7G sustained turns for minutes on end, BFM turns which are just sort of an accelerated stall with the airframe and wings buffetting heavily. On top of all of that, the jets have to deal with poor student landings, etc. We Over G the airplanes every once in a while, too (not intentionally, of course).
I don't see wings falling off our jets, and we fly these things literally hundreds and hundreds of rough hours per year.
If an airplane has established G limits, and the operators are abiding by those limits, there should not be catastrophic in-flight failures of major airframe components.
If the operators are either a) exceeding operating limits and not performing the following inspections afterward, or b) not performing the inspections properly, this is an operator issue and NOT an FAA issue.