All right boys, a few points to clarify. Don't take it the wrong way, but as one of the resident pilots, I couldn't allow myths to perpetuate.
Starfighter: Yes any aircraft can do CFIT, if you're looking inside. It's pretty bloody hard to fly into the ground if you're looking outside. It usually happens when guys are pulling off target and look back at the target or inside the cockpit to check the map, it's also pretty common during night approaches due to some of the illusions you're susceptible to at night. As I stated in my post, most of this has been remedied with proper training. It is stressed over and over again to keep your head out of the cockpit in turns and pulling off target, and when you do put your head inside to do a cockpit or map check, it's for no more than 5 sec. Your Tutor story is a flameout and not CFIT, CFIT is a perfectly serviceable aircraft striking the ground.
*edit* I just reread your post and you didn't mention it was a flame out, but a birdstrike, in either case it's not CFIT but an emergency.
Your backseater ejection story, again fixed with proper training. It actually went the opposite way a year or so ago. The Snowbirds were in London for an airshow and were up on a Media flight. I think it was #1 & #5 that touched, 5 flew back and 1 ejected. In the Toots, you each had to pull your own handles. The pax was briefed, and it was the same briefing you always give in ejection seat aircraft...."Prepare to abandon the aircraft....Eject, Eject, Eject" You pull on the second "Eject" and the pilot pulls on the third. The pax in this case was waiting for the pilot to eject, so when the pilot said eject the third time and the pax was still sitting beside him, he punched out, the pax followed. Not a problem on the Hawk, Harvard or Hornet with interseat sequencing. On the Harvard, no matter who pulled, the back seat went first and like .37 sec later the front seat went. I'm not sure about the timings on the Hawk or Hornet since I haven't studied their operating instructions in detail.
The last one, I've dropped my seat pin a couple times. As long as you're strapped in properly, you're not going to get killed. The tech just brought out a new pin, I put it in and that was the end of it. Gotta love the new seats. Martin Baker Mk16.
Gunnerlove,
Hitting your legs on the panel isn't a major concern anymore since all of our ejection seat aircraft except the Tutor have leg lines that pull your feet into the seat as you go up the rails.
I'm sure your Hawker comment was a misprint since we have Hawks made by BAe and not Hawker. The birds don't necessarily break the compressor blades to cause flameouts, if they block enough air inflow it'll flameout. So you could have a flameout without anything coming into contact with the compressor blades
Rant off.
Cheers