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![]() "Harry Andreas" wrote in message ... In article , (David McArthur) wrote: I hope they are installing a zero-zero ejaction seat. IIRC the F-104 wasn't equipped with that capability. At least the downward firing seat saves the cost of digging a grave ![]() Keith |
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![]() "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "Harry Andreas" wrote in message ... In article , (David McArthur) wrote: I hope they are installing a zero-zero ejaction seat. IIRC the F-104 wasn't equipped with that capability. At least the downward firing seat saves the cost of digging a grave ![]() Keith From an article by Joe Baugher for those who might not know what Keith is talking about although this one was probably among the retrofits. Tex The first F-104As were fitted with Lockheed-designed downward-firing ejector seats. Lockheed engineers had feared that upward-firing ejections would not be safe at the speeds at which the F-104 would be flying, the seat supposedly being unable to clear the tall vertical tail at such high speeds. Consequently, they opted for a downward-firing ejection system. The system was the first fully-automatic downward-firing ejection system ever employed in a production fighter. When the pilot initiated the ejection sequence by pulling the ejection ring, an automatic sequence of events was initiated. First, the cockpit depressurized and the flight control stick retracted. The parachute shoulder harness then tightened and the pilot's feet were pulled together and clamped into place. The escape hatch was then blown off the bottom of the aircraft and the seat fired, ejecting the pilot out the bottom of the airplane. This system proved to be unsafe in service, since it was useless for emergencies that occurred during landings, takeoffs, or anywhere near the ground. In order to eject safely at low altitudes, the pilot would first have to roll his aircraft inverted and then eject upward out of the bottom of the plane. This was of course not always feasible, and the famous test pilot Iven C. Kincheloe was among 21 F-104 aircrew to be killed by the deficiencies in this escape system. Consequently, the downward ejection system was quite unpopular with F-104A pilots and was replaced in the field by the more conventional Lockheed C-2 upward-firing ejector seat. |
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