The first sign was the smoke. A black column climbing over the Mojave Desert, visible for miles, fed by a bomber that had been full of fuel seconds earlier. By the time Edwards Air Force Base confirmed what everyone watching already feared, a B-52H Stratofortress was burning on the airfield and eight people were gone.
The bomber went down just after takeoff at 11:20 a.m. on June 15, 2026, on a routine test mission. All eight aboard — a mix of military, civilian and contractor personnel — were killed. It is the first crash of a B-52 since 2016, and the deadliest since 1982.
The cruelest detail: the jet that crashed was one of the aircraft rebuilding the B-52’s future.
Quick Facts
- Aircraft: Boeing B-52H Stratofortress, tail 60-0061
- Unit: 412th Test Wing, Edwards AFB, California
- When: 11:20 a.m. PDT, June 15, 2026, shortly after takeoff
- Aboard: 8 (military, civilian and contractor) — all killed
- Mission: Routine test flight supporting the B-52 radar-modernization program
- Significance: First B-52 crash since 2016; deadliest since 1982
- Status: Under investigation (est. ~6 months)
Eight Aboard, None Survived
Edwards is a test base, and test crews fly bigger than line crews. A combat B-52 carries five. This aircraft carried eight, because a test sortie packs in engineers and instrumentation specialists alongside the flight crew. When the bomber hit the ground and erupted, the size of that crew turned a crash into a catastrophe.
The base’s first statement was brief and grim.
Footage from inside the base showed the towering plume that the Air Force later said helped investigators conclude the crash was unsurvivable. The fire was ferocious because the tanks were near full: a B-52H tops off at more than 312,000 pounds of fuel, and almost all of it was still aboard at the moment of takeoff.

The Jet That Was Rebuilding the B-52’s Future
According to the ‘Air Force amn/nco/snco’ community page, the aircraft was B-52H 60-0061 — the jet being used to test the bomber’s new AESA radar. That detail matters. The Stratofortress is in the middle of the most ambitious upgrade of its 70-year life: a re-engining with Rolls-Royce F130 powerplants, a modern active electronically scanned array radar, and new avionics that will turn the H-model into the B-52J and keep it flying into the 2050s.
60-0061 had ferried to Edwards from Boeing’s San Antonio facility in December 2025 to begin exactly that work. It was, in other words, one of the jets proving the bomber could outlive everything built to replace it. Losing it — and the people flying it — is a blow to both a program and a community.
A Rare Loss for the Stratofortress
For an aircraft that has been in service since the Eisenhower administration, the B-52 has an enviable safety record. The last crash was in 2016 at Andersen AFB in Guam, when the crew walked away. Before that, a 2008 Guam crash killed six. You have to go back to a 1982 accident at Mather AFB, which killed nine, to find a deadlier B-52 loss than this one.

Col. James Hayes, deputy commander of the 412th Test Wing, said the investigation into what happened could take roughly six months. Until then, the cause — mechanical, structural, or something else entirely — remains unknown.
The news video below carries the official update from base leadership.
The Stratofortress was supposed to be the bomber that never quit. On June 15, on the same airfield where America tests its future, it claimed eight of its own.
Sources: Edwards Air Force Base / 412th Test Wing Public Affairs; CNN; CBS News; Reuters; U.S. Air Force B-52H fact sheet.




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