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Post your lost story here, so we can all laugh at them.
My first one is "The lake that shouldn't be there". I was flying from north of the Dallas/Fort Worth area to my home port of Luck Field which is south of Fort Worth. No radios of any type in my little Taylorcraft. All was well. A nice day with reasonable visibility. Some haze but strong VFR. About halfway to Dallas I come over a lake. A big lake. One that would be HUGE on my sectional. It was not on the map. I had just been flying for about 45 minutes on a magnetic heading and keeping close track of time. There was NO way this lake could be on the ground but not on my map. The vis was such I couldn't see the buildings of Dallas or Fort Worth. I was convinced somehow I had gotten lost. I thought maybe the compass was stuck on the wrong heading. I did a couple of small turns to see if the compass moved. The compass passed this test. But my training kicked in -- if in doubt, fly the heading needed and keep track of time. I did this. After about 20 minutes I got to another lake and this one was on the map. I was on course. It turns out my mystery lake was new and not on the maps yet. My map was current. I swear it was. I never use out of date maps. That's my story and I am sticking to it :-) Anyway I was where I thought I was, but very concerned for a while when I saw that damned lake under me that wasn't supposed to be there. What is your favorite "lost" story? Danny Deger |
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Danny Deger wrote:
It turns out my mystery lake was new and not on the maps yet. My map was current. I swear it was. I never use out of date maps. That's my story and I am sticking to it :-) Anyway I was where I thought I was, but very concerned for a while when I saw that damned lake under me that wasn't supposed to be there. A new LAKE? That's pretty big for a "new" thing. I wasn't airborne, but roadborne with a satnav trying to get from Point A to Point B in a new city, and was tooling along a massive divided four-lane when suddently, the GPS started trying to U-turn me. Turned out that the road was newer than my data...the navigator thought I was going off-road for a good half-mile. |
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![]() "Typhoon502" wrote in message ups.com... Danny Deger wrote: It turns out my mystery lake was new and not on the maps yet. My map was current. I swear it was. I never use out of date maps. That's my story and I am sticking to it :-) Anyway I was where I thought I was, but very concerned for a while when I saw that damned lake under me that wasn't supposed to be there. A new LAKE? That's pretty big for a "new" thing. Yes. A new LAKE. They had just completed a dam and I guess the lake filled up pretty fast behind the dam. As I said. My story is my charts were up to date. That's my story and I'm sticking to it :-) Danny Deger |
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On Mon, 8 Jan 2007 10:00:26 -0600, "Danny Deger"
wrote: What is your favorite "lost" story? Every IP knows that you have to let the students go a little bit, so that they can see the outcome of their errors and then the lesson is reinforced. The difficult judgement call is knowing how far to let them progress and still be able to make the recovery without damage to the airplane or the landscape. I was watching a student doing a VFR low-level nav in a T-37 across the desert of Southern Arizona. We'd headed outside of the Williams AFB local training area and SW of Tucson into the area south of I-10. He'd gotten overwhelmed with flying low and still trying to keep up with map-reading and dead reckoning, and I was dutifully urging him to ease it down just a bit more so that he could successfully penetrate the fictitious enemy defenses. I knew we weren't going to be running out of gas--we were headed generally north bound and we could easily make it back to Willy. What I didn't know (but should have) was that we were entering the Gila Bend gunnery range and just over the next ridge ahead of us was a conventional air-to-ground gunnery range. We crested the ridge, I saw the target array, run-in-lines, strafe panels, control tower and a flight of four Phantoms in the box pattern doing 30 degree dive bomb drops. "I've got the airplane..." "Yessir, you've got it..." "We're going to go a bit lower now, and watch how we use this ridge line for terrain masking." "Wow, sir, we're really low." "Not really, this is about five hundred feet." "But, sir, it looks closer to about fifty. That saguaro was higher than we were." "That's just an optical illusion caused by our speed." "Don't you think we should climb now, sir?" "No, not until I hop over this semi, and we get north of the Interstate here. Ahhh, that looks good. You want to tune in Chandler VOR now and get ready for an instrument approach when we get there?" "Is my low-level over, sir?" "Yep." Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
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On Mon, 08 Jan 2007 18:00:20 GMT, Ed Rasimus wrote in
: ... "Don't you think we should climb now, sir?" "No, not until I hop over this semi, and we get north of the Interstate here. Ahhh, that looks good. ..." LOL! Great story. Thanks for sharing it! Marty -- Big-8 newsgroups: humanities.*, misc.*, news.*, rec.*, sci.*, soc.*, talk.* See http://www.big-8.org for info on how to add or remove newsgroups. |
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![]() "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message ... On Mon, 8 Jan 2007 10:00:26 -0600, "Danny Deger" wrote: What is your favorite "lost" story? Every IP knows that you have to let the students go a little bit, so that they can see the outcome of their errors and then the lesson is reinforced. The difficult judgement call is knowing how far to let them progress and still be able to make the recovery without damage to the airplane or the landscape. Correct of course...............and this can no doubt take on some real IP "decision making moments" as he sits in the back of a T38 on final with a student up front starting to develop a rather LARGE sink rate :-)))))) Dudley Henriques |
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Danny Deger wrote:
snip What is your favorite "lost" story? Danny Deger I won't say where this happened or when in case any of the offending crew is still married ![]() get away with pictures of naked women under the plexiglass on the plotter table of HC-130 aircraft. I was sitting in the left scanner seat listening to the flight deck discussing the latest copy of Hustler. We were heading in the general direction of a place where the locals would not be happy to see us. Pilot asked nav where we were. Nav replied "we should just be passing a large village near a river at 9 o'clock." Pilot looked and couldn't see it. I stated that we had passed a small village about 10 minutes before, but there was no river. Nav and pilot agreed that must be it and went back to the discussion at hand. I decided I didn't want to hear anymore and a bunk had just become unoccupied so I crawled in. Not much later things got noisy as we did a very sharp 180. I never did ask how far we had been off course ![]() discussed when we got back to the states.] The running gag in that unit was you could tell how confident the nav was by the width of the lines on his charts. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
#8
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Danny Deger wrote:
Post your lost story here, so we can all laugh at them. My first one is "The lake that shouldn't be there". I was flying from north of the Dallas/Fort Worth area to my home port of Luck Field which is south of Fort Worth. No radios of any type in my little Taylorcraft. All was well. A nice day with reasonable visibility. Some haze but strong VFR. About halfway to Dallas I come over a lake. A big lake. One that would be HUGE on my sectional. It was not on the map. I had just been flying for about 45 minutes on a magnetic heading and keeping close track of time. There was NO way this lake could be on the ground but not on my map. The vis was such I couldn't see the buildings of Dallas or Fort Worth. I was convinced somehow I had gotten lost. I thought maybe the compass was stuck on the wrong heading. I did a couple of small turns to see if the compass moved. The compass passed this test. But my training kicked in -- if in doubt, fly the heading needed and keep track of time. I did this. After about 20 minutes I got to another lake and this one was on the map. I was on course. It turns out my mystery lake was new and not on the maps yet. My map was current. I swear it was. I never use out of date maps. That's my story and I am sticking to it :-) Anyway I was where I thought I was, but very concerned for a while when I saw that damned lake under me that wasn't supposed to be there. What is your favorite "lost" story? Shortly after the end of WWII, I had a flight from Capodichino (Naples, Italy) to Orly outside of Paris in a C-47. In those days, enroute services were kind of minimal, so I was tooling along FD&H until I reached what should have been an enroute checkpoint and I couldn't find it. Maps, pilotage, etc. and still couldn't recognize anything on the ground that'd give me a clue. Finally, I spotted what looked like an active airfield, which I gingerly approached and circled, hoping to see the name of the place painted on the top of a barn roof or something similar, but no such luck. Finally, I tooled into the landing pattern and set down. Taxiied up to what appeared to be a Base Ops of some sort with people standing around out front watching me. I shut down and got out to approach one and the conversation went something like this: "Qu'est-ce que c'est le nom ici?. Je suis perdu." (What's the name of this place? I'm lost.) "Monsieur, ce place s'appelle Rheims." (Sir, this place is called Rheims) "Merci, beaucoup.........au revoir!" (Thanks........bye!) I'd been bucking a hellaceous and totally unexpected headwind and really wasn't very far off course or far from my destination. I hadn't called to ask for permission to land, nor had I filed any sort of additional clearance on leaving to resume my flight. The funny thing about it was that I never heard another word about that impromptu navigation maneuver from a single soul.....the only people who knew that it happened were my crew and the Frenchmen on the ground, and none of us talked. I shudder to think of what I'd have had to go through if the same thing happened to me in the States, even at that time. George Z. |
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On Mon, 8 Jan 2007 13:38:16 -0500, "Dudley Henriques"
wrote: "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 8 Jan 2007 10:00:26 -0600, "Danny Deger" wrote: What is your favorite "lost" story? Every IP knows that you have to let the students go a little bit, so that they can see the outcome of their errors and then the lesson is reinforced. The difficult judgement call is knowing how far to let them progress and still be able to make the recovery without damage to the airplane or the landscape. Correct of course...............and this can no doubt take on some real IP "decision making moments" as he sits in the back of a T38 on final with a student up front starting to develop a rather LARGE sink rate :-)))))) Dudley Henriques I've not done the UPT thing in a T-38, but spent about 1500 hours (in ..9 increments) as an IP (and IP's IP) in the AT-38 at Fighter Lead-In. Generally the landing wasn't much of an issue. The flight attitude would tell you most of what you needed to know--if you had the right pitch and the airspeed was ball park, you were OK. But, things happen occasionally. I had an old friend who had been a UPT student of mine, come through Holloman for a fast jet requal after a staff job. He'd been a Raven and was generally crazy, but a good aviator. First traffic pattern, just as you describe. He falls back on his old FAC flying patterns and goes to "flare"--not the thing to do, in the Talon which responded to holding constant attitude until entering ground effect and then when the airplane tries to lower the nose in response to the increased wing effectiveness, simply adding back pressure to hold the landing attitude. He flares at about 40 feet AGL. I sense impending doom and calmly adopt a mezzo-soprano tone as I scream "I've got it!" Grab the bird, freeze the stick and simultaneously reach for a yard of throttle. Bottom falls out, we impact and bounce into the air about 25 feet just in time for the burners to light and I gingerly milk it back into controlled flight. "Let's try another one, and this time lets do it like the briefing, OK?" Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
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Ed Rasimus wrote:
Every IP knows that you have to let the students go a little bit, so that they can see the outcome of their errors and then the lesson is reinforced. The difficult judgement call is knowing how far to let them progress and still be able to make the recovery without damage to the airplane or the landscape. Ye olde learning curve! Didn't happen to me, but to a friend while we were in Basic Jet in Kingsville, TX. Late in the Fam series, one each student and IP in a Tango Two, IP in the back. There was a dingus back there which let the IP slew the directional gyro in order to test the S.A. of the stud up front. Approaching the end of the hop, said IP applied said dingus, and said "let's go home." Stud makes the initial callup to homeplate ("Ready or not, here I come," more or less), tunes up NASKINGS on the TACAN, and turns until the arrowhead is at the top of the DG. Time passes. IP waits. More time passes. Irritation grows in the back seat. Finally: "Sure looks dry out there." (NASKINGS, for the uninitiated, sits a few miles off an arm of Baffin Bay, near the Gulf of Mexico. The bay is visible for mucho miles prior to arrival). "Yes sir." More JP-5 becomes smoke and noise. Kingsville Approach, accustomed to this sort of thing, hasn't commented on the fact that Our Hero hasn't reported the 5-mile initial yet. "Some kinda drought down there, huh?" "Yes sir," as before, but a bit nervously, as the hapless stud begins to twig that Something Is Not Right. Doesn't usually take more than ten minutes to start seeing signs of human habitation once headed toward the home patch from the MOA. IP begins to wonder if Mexican Air Force interceptors (T-28s) are warming up on the tarmac. Finally, inevitably: "Doesn't much look like downtown Kingsville down there, does it?" "No, sir." "Happen to notice the DME lately?" Student notices that the numbers in Mickey's face are in high double digits and getting bigger (it's only 100 miles from NASKINGS to Nuevo Laredo). "Urk." The light dawning, the stud finally looks at his wet compass and cross-checks against the setting sun in front of him, says "Toto, I don't think we're in Kansas any more," and pulls a fast 180. The recovery was nominal from that point onward. He got a Below for SA and an Above for making his instructor laugh. Jeff |
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