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572506 590026 Last Drone Flight for 2506

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572506-with-590026-Last-Drone-Flight-Before-Self-Destruct.jpg 572490 572470 WT92 QFsThumbnails590076 590020 590046 and More Drones Lined Up Tyndall 1993572490 572470 WT92 QFsThumbnails590076 590020 590046 and More Drones Lined Up Tyndall 1993572490 572470 WT92 QFsThumbnails590076 590020 590046 and More Drones Lined Up Tyndall 1993572490 572470 WT92 QFsThumbnails590076 590020 590046 and More Drones Lined Up Tyndall 1993572490 572470 WT92 QFsThumbnails590076 590020 590046 and More Drones Lined Up Tyndall 1993572490 572470 WT92 QFsThumbnails590076 590020 590046 and More Drones Lined Up Tyndall 1993572490 572470 WT92 QFsThumbnails590076 590020 590046 and More Drones Lined Up Tyndall 1993

F-106A 59-0026 and 572506 on August 2, 1993 parked on the swamp track for a fight with some F-16's and F-15's from Tyndall AFB. 59-0026 is on the left with the 5th FIS rudder and was a spare in case 57-2506 on the right crashed during takeoff. 57-2506 had cracks in the wings and it was expected NOT TO RETURN from this flight. It was scheduled as a one-way flight, so no return flight was planned. The take-off went well for 57-2506, so the spare was not needed, but surprisingly 57-2506 survived all the live missiles fired by the F-16s and F-15s. With no return flight drone profile planned, at 1435 hours they had to press the self-destruct button and F-106A 57-2506 exploded over the Gulf of Mexico.