manqiangrexue
Brigadier
I don't know about the facts straight, but in my opinion, it would be unusual for an engine failure to cause this. The pilot was on final approach during landing so the engines were pretty much gliding on fumes. Even a sudden complete loss of power in both engines should still allow the jet to glide its final distance on momentum. Even if not, the pilot should be able to eject safely upwards. Failure of the controls causing the jet to pitch up or spin violently at this stage where the it is so close to the ground would be a very likely cause of crash, especially if the pilot ejected to hit the ground, meaning the jet was upside down. That is not a scenario typically caused by engine issues.Thanks for the information, but it does contradict Alert 5's bad engine story:
China revealed the first fatal J-15 accident
China has admitted that a J-15 pilot was killed back in Apr. 27 this year. Zhang Chao was carrying out simulated carrier landings when he encountered trouble with the jet’s engines. He ejected from his stricken aircraft at the last minute and later died of his injuries.