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Hi Dudley,
I found that you have time in the T38 Talon. Is it as sweet to fly as it looks? Back in 85 at Oshkosh they had the civilian owned T38 on the ramp that I later saw in a Pepsi commercial (Top Gun inspired) and in the movie Dragnet. After getting back to camp I was telling a buddy of my instant fondness of the jet. He dismissed it as "just a trainer". After over 20 years, the Talon remains my favorite and grabs my attention whether sitting on the ramp, in the air or even in short movie shot like in Apollo 13. Marty in Mo. |
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On 2007-06-19 00:18:23 -0400, "Marty" said:
Hi Dudley, I found that you have time in the T38 Talon. Is it as sweet to fly as it looks? Back in 85 at Oshkosh they had the civilian owned T38 on the ramp that I later saw in a Pepsi commercial (Top Gun inspired) and in the movie Dragnet. After getting back to camp I was telling a buddy of my instant fondness of the jet. He dismissed it as "just a trainer". After over 20 years, the Talon remains my favorite and grabs my attention whether sitting on the ramp, in the air or even in short movie shot like in Apollo 13. Marty in Mo. Hi Marty; The 38 lists high on the list of airplanes I have flown. It is indeed one of the true "fun" machines. The comment made by your friend I find quite amusing :-) The 38 was actually designed from the ground up to train pilots who would be flying extremely high performance fighter planes. Considering this purpose alone, Northrop built into the airplane sensitivity and attention to handling that actually exceeded in many cases the difficulity and attention to handling found in the fighters the pilots would be flying after flying the Talon. It is said within the Air Force, and rightly so, that NO pilot having gone through the Talon program has to EVER be ashamed to "brag" about having flown it :-) We have a saying about the Talon; "It sits on the ramp and gives you the impression it's going Mach 1" Dudley Henriques |
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Dudley Henriques wrote:
We have a saying about the Talon; "It sits on the ramp and gives you the impression it's going Mach 1" Ain't that the truth? I have a friend who flew them when she went through pilot training and said they were a blast to fly. I'd love to just go for a ride in one. That is one sleek looking airplane. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com |
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On 2007-06-19 10:15:20 -0400, "Mortimer Schnerd, RN"
mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com said: Dudley Henriques wrote: We have a saying about the Talon; "It sits on the ramp and gives you the impression it's going Mach 1" Ain't that the truth? I have a friend who flew them when she went through pilot training and said they were a blast to fly. I'd love to just go for a ride in one. That is one sleek looking airplane. There's a little "trick" that's used from time to time in the Talon community concerning taking a newbie up for their first ride in a 38. The roll rate of the Talon is practically in the class of an urban legend. At .9 mach with a full lateral stick throw, you can push 720 degrees/sec out of the roll rate. That's QUICK! What you do is take the newbie up and talk up the roll rate during the climb. Once up to altitude, you ask the newbie if they want to see a roll. You always get a "yes" on this question :-) You take the airplane out to .9 and key the ICS and ask, "Are you ready?" When you get the "yes" from the back seat, you jiggle the stick about an inch left and back again. This "jars" the 38 on the longitudinal axis to about 10 degrees and back again to level flight. Without further fanfare you key the ICS and ask, "How was THAT? Want to see another one????" You almost always get a "HOLY ****!!!!" MAN, now THAT was FAST!!!!" Then without warning, you actually roll the airplane with a full lateral stick throw and laugh like hell as the newbie's helmet bounces off the canopy. GOD, I do miss the "good ole'days!! :-)) Dudley Henriques |
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"Marty" wrote in message
... He dismissed it as "just a trainer". After over 20 years, the Talon remains my favorite and grabs my attention whether sitting on the ramp, in the air or even in short movie shot like in Apollo 13. Marty in Mo. Some good info here. very interesting read. http://www.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?fsID=126 -- http://straightandlevel1973.spaces.live.com/ I'm not always right, But I'm never wrong! |
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![]() "Crash Lander" wrote in message ... "Marty" wrote in message ... Some good info here. very interesting read. http://www.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?fsID=126 -- http://straightandlevel1973.spaces.live.com/ I'm not always right, But I'm never wrong! Thanks for the links! I just love this from the fact sheet- "The T-38 needs as little as 2,300 feet (695.2 meters) of runway to take off and can climb from sea level to nearly 30,000 feet (9,068 meters) in one minute. T-38s modified by the propulsion modernization program have approximately 19 percent more thrust, reducing takeoff distance by 9 percent. The instructor and student sit in tandem on rocket-powered ejection seats in a pressurized, air-conditioned cockpit." Don't think I'll ever experience the "720 degree roll rate" Dudley mentioned but one can dream right? Thanks again, Marty in MO. |
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"Dudley Henriques" wrote in message
news:2007061912103350073-dhenriques@rcncom... You take the airplane out to .9 and key the ICS and ask, "Are you ready?" When you get the "yes" from the back seat, you jiggle the stick about an inch left and back again. This "jars" the 38 on the longitudinal axis to about 10 degrees and back again to level flight. Without further fanfare you key the ICS and ask, "How was THAT? Want to see another one????" You almost always get a "HOLY ****!!!!" MAN, now THAT was FAST!!!!" Then without warning, you actually roll the airplane with a full lateral stick throw and laugh like hell as the newbie's helmet bounces off the canopy. GOD, I do miss the "good ole'days!! :-)) Dudley Henriques LOL! That's just cruel! (but funny!) ;-) Crash Lander -- http://straightandlevel1973.spaces.live.com/ I'm not always right, But I'm never wrong! |
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![]() "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message news:2007061912103350073-dhenriques@rcncom... On 2007-06-19 10:15:20 -0400, "Mortimer Schnerd, RN" mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com said: SNIP That is one sleek looking airplane. There's a little "trick" that's used from time to time in the Talon community concerning taking a newbie up for their first ride in a 38. The roll rate of the Talon is practically in the class of an urban legend. At .9 mach with a full lateral stick throw, you can push 720 degrees/sec out of the roll rate. That's QUICK! What you do is take the newbie up and talk up the roll rate during the climb. Once up to altitude, you ask the newbie if they want to see a roll. You always get a "yes" on this question :-) You take the airplane out to .9 and key the ICS and ask, "Are you ready?" When you get the "yes" from the back seat, you jiggle the stick about an inch left and back again. This "jars" the 38 on the longitudinal axis to about 10 degrees and back again to level flight. Without further fanfare you key the ICS and ask, "How was THAT? Want to see another one????" You almost always get a "HOLY ****!!!!" MAN, now THAT was FAST!!!!" Then without warning, you actually roll the airplane with a full lateral stick throw and laugh like hell as the newbie's helmet bounces off the canopy. GOD, I do miss the "good ole'days!! :-)) Dudley Henriques Thanks Dudley, I never could look at it as "just a trainer". I'd love to be that newbe bouncing his helmet off the canopy. The longevity of the jet and all of the efforts and upgrades being done to keep it on line is a tribute to the design. Thanks again, Marty in Mo. |
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On 2007-06-19 21:21:48 -0400, "Marty" said:
"Dudley Henriques" wrote in message news:2007061912103350073-dhenriques@rcncom... On 2007-06-19 10:15:20 -0400, "Mortimer Schnerd, RN" mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com said: SNIP That is one sleek looking airplane. There's a little "trick" that's used from time to time in the Talon community concerning taking a newbie up for their first ride in a 38. The roll rate of the Talon is practically in the class of an urban legend. At .9 mach with a full lateral stick throw, you can push 720 degrees/sec out of the roll rate. That's QUICK! What you do is take the newbie up and talk up the roll rate during the climb. Once up to altitude, you ask the newbie if they want to see a roll. You always get a "yes" on this question :-) You take the airplane out to .9 and key the ICS and ask, "Are you ready?" When you get the "yes" from the back seat, you jiggle the stick about an inch left and back again. This "jars" the 38 on the longitudinal axis to about 10 degrees and back again to level flight. Without further fanfare you key the ICS and ask, "How was THAT? Want to see another one????" You almost always get a "HOLY ****!!!!" MAN, now THAT was FAST!!!!" Then without warning, you actually roll the airplane with a full lateral stick throw and laugh like hell as the newbie's helmet bounces off the canopy. GOD, I do miss the "good ole'days!! :-)) Dudley Henriques Thanks Dudley, I never could look at it as "just a trainer". I'd love to be that newbe bouncing his helmet off the canopy. The longevity of the jet and all of the efforts and upgrades being done to keep it on line is a tribute to the design. Thanks again, Marty in Mo. I talk to the T38 Thunderbird alumni almost every week having several friends from that era who flew the Talon on the team. Naturally the guys loved the F4 for airshow work as it was big, noisy, and the team could use the smoke from the J79's as a hack index reference. But of all the planes the guys flew, they swear they liked the Talon the best. If you ever get the chance, you might enjoy reading "They Rode The Thunder", the official history of the Thunderbirds, written by my good friend Bob Gore. Bob was with the Talon team and in fact designed the beautiful paint scheme you see on the Thunderbird T38's. Dudley Henriques |
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On 2007-06-19 21:12:02 -0400, "Marty" said:
"Crash Lander" wrote in message ... "Marty" wrote in message ... Some good info here. very interesting read. http://www.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?fsID=126 -- http://straightandlevel1973.spaces.live.com/ I'm not always right, But I'm never wrong! Thanks for the links! I just love this from the fact sheet- "The T-38 needs as little as 2,300 feet (695.2 meters) of runway to take off and can climb from sea level to nearly 30,000 feet (9,068 meters) in one minute. T-38s modified by the propulsion modernization program have approximately 19 percent more thrust, reducing takeoff distance by 9 percent. The instructor and student sit in tandem on rocket-powered ejection seats in a pressurized, air-conditioned cockpit." Don't think I'll ever experience the "720 degree roll rate" Dudley mentioned but one can dream right? Thanks again, Marty in MO. One of the hardest things you have to do when flying the 38 is to get the wheels off the ground on takeoff and the gear sucked in before exceeding first the max tire speed and then the max gear speed. It happens VERY QUICKLY!!! :-) Dudley Henriques |
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