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In article , john Szalay
says... Miloch wrote in news:nkrbe2019n1 : ... Never would have happened if the brakes had been checked/adjusted by Midas! ....just sayin' * |
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Miloch wrote in
: In article , john Szalay says... Miloch wrote in news:nkrbe2019n1 : ... Never would have happened if the brakes had been checked/adjusted by Midas! ...just sayin' On the first NACA research flight of airplane #52-5778, pilot Scott Crossfield had to make a powerless "deadstick" landing following an engine fire warning. This was something North American's own test pilots doubted could be done, for the early F-100 lacked flaps and landed "hot as hell." Crossfield followed up the flawless approach and landing by coasting off the lakebed, up the ramp, and then through the front door of the NACA hangar, frantically trying to stop the F-100A, which had used up its emergency brake power. Crossfield missed the NACA X fleet, but crunched the nose of the aircraft through the hangar's side wall. It is reported that Chuck Yeager then proclaimed that while the sonic wall had been his, the hangar wall was Crossfield's! The hangar wall and the F-100A were repaired, and the airplane flew again. |
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john Szalay john.szalayatatt.net wrote in
31: Miloch wrote in : In article , john Szalay says... Miloch wrote in news:nkrbe2019n1 : ... Never would have happened if the brakes had been checked/adjusted by Midas! ...just sayin' On the first NACA research flight of airplane #52-5778, pilot Scott Crossfield had to make a powerless "deadstick" landing following an engine fire warning. This was something North American's own test pilots doubted could be done, for the early F-100 lacked flaps and landed "hot as hell." Crossfield followed up the flawless approach and landing by coasting off the lakebed, up the ramp, and then through the front door of the NACA hangar, frantically trying to stop the F-100A, which had used up its emergency brake power. Crossfield missed the NACA X fleet, but crunched the nose of the aircraft through the hangar's side wall. It is reported that Chuck Yeager then proclaimed that while the sonic wall had been his, the hangar wall was Crossfield's! The hangar wall and the F-100A were repaired, and the airplane flew again. The stories! What would there be without the stories! That one is primo! Scotty and Chuck. Wow. |
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In article , john Szalay
says... Miloch wrote in : In article , john Szalay says... Miloch wrote in news:nkrbe2019n1 : ... Never would have happened if the brakes had been checked/adjusted by Midas! ...just sayin' On the first NACA research flight of airplane #52-5778, pilot Scott Crossfield had to make a powerless "deadstick" landing following an engine fire warning. This was something North American's own test pilots doubted could be done, for the early F-100 lacked flaps and landed "hot as hell." Crossfield followed up the flawless approach and landing by coasting off the lakebed, up the ramp, and then through the front door of the NACA hangar, frantically trying to stop the F-100A, which had used up its emergency brake power. Crossfield missed the NACA X fleet, but crunched the nose of the aircraft through the hangar's side wall. It is reported that Chuck Yeager then proclaimed that while the sonic wall had been his, the hangar wall was Crossfield's! The hangar wall and the F-100A were repaired, and the airplane flew again. My experience with the F-100s is strickly seeing them in the VietNam War. The most interesting story I heard concerned TET of 1968 with the North Vietnamese attacking everywhere...including Ben Hoa where I flew out of. Witnesses told me of watching F-100s stationed at Ben Hoa AFB taking off & dropping their ordnance on enemy positions before their wheels were fully up. I was there for TET of 1969 and it was quiet. * |
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