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![]() "Ogden Johnson III" wrote in message ... wrote: See: http://www.defensetech.org/archives/004362.html Not so fast on the Buckeye, bucko. Okay, there are going to be several private jets flying ... we had one of them at the Meridian air show a couple months ago flown by an old friend of mine. But in an operational, military world, the Trusty Tubbyjet is gone, Gone, GONE. R/ John |
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John Carrier wrote:
"Ogden Johnson III" wrote in message ... wrote: See: http://www.defensetech.org/archives/004362.html Not so fast on the Buckeye, bucko. Okay, there are going to be several private jets flying ... we had one of them at the Meridian air show a couple months ago flown by an old friend of mine. But in an operational, military world, the Trusty Tubbyjet is gone, Gone, GONE. R/ John Used with great results at Pax in the OCF program. Don't know if that's still being run but if not it should be. -- Dudley Henriques |
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![]() "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ... John Carrier wrote: "Ogden Johnson III" wrote in message ... wrote: See: http://www.defensetech.org/archives/004362.html Not so fast on the Buckeye, bucko. Okay, there are going to be several private jets flying ... we had one of them at the Meridian air show a couple months ago flown by an old friend of mine. But in an operational, military world, the Trusty Tubbyjet is gone, Gone, GONE. R/ John Used with great results at Pax in the OCF program. Don't know if that's still being run but if not it should be. Should be. A onesy/twosy. The Tubby was/is a GREAT OCF airplane. You could use any jet's recovery controls and the A/C would recover. There used to be a fleet OCF program; once a year requal. Upright and inverted, rudder triplets and lomchevacs. Jerry Galagher (classmate, USNA '69) is still there IIRC. Mr. OCF for the Navy for years. We've got two highly qualified OCF guys in Meridian (both retired in the sim/ground school world). One was a fleet OCF guy and might well be the jet lomchevac king. The other was doing OCF in T-2's forever, first as a regular, then a reserve. We don't spin the T-45. We do train to a few relatively benign departures; a little more exotic stuff in the simulator, but it doesn't spin predictably. It's inadvisable to spin most jets, though its done in flight test (usually with spin chutes, etc hung on). The F-18 doesn't spin and the latest flight control software evidently gets rid of its most serious departure mode. The Turkey was easy to spin if you tried hard enough. I don't think anyone ever recovered from a fully-developed F-14 spin. R / John |
#6
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John Carrier wrote:
"Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ... John Carrier wrote: "Ogden Johnson III" wrote in message ... wrote: See: http://www.defensetech.org/archives/004362.html Not so fast on the Buckeye, bucko. Okay, there are going to be several private jets flying ... we had one of them at the Meridian air show a couple months ago flown by an old friend of mine. But in an operational, military world, the Trusty Tubbyjet is gone, Gone, GONE. R/ John Used with great results at Pax in the OCF program. Don't know if that's still being run but if not it should be. Should be. A onesy/twosy. The Tubby was/is a GREAT OCF airplane. You could use any jet's recovery controls and the A/C would recover. There used to be a fleet OCF program; once a year requal. Upright and inverted, rudder triplets and lomchevacs. Jerry Galagher (classmate, USNA '69) is still there IIRC. Mr. OCF for the Navy for years. We've got two highly qualified OCF guys in Meridian (both retired in the sim/ground school world). One was a fleet OCF guy and might well be the jet lomchevac king. The other was doing OCF in T-2's forever, first as a regular, then a reserve. We don't spin the T-45. We do train to a few relatively benign departures; a little more exotic stuff in the simulator, but it doesn't spin predictably. It's inadvisable to spin most jets, though its done in flight test (usually with spin chutes, etc hung on). The F-18 doesn't spin and the latest flight control software evidently gets rid of its most serious departure mode. The Turkey was easy to spin if you tried hard enough. I don't think anyone ever recovered from a fully-developed F-14 spin. R / John On the Turkey spin; DD Smith and Pete Angelina put one in the bay at Strike. They still show the film at TPS. Interesting that the airplane recovered itself after the ejections altered the erect spin mode. -- Dudley Henriques |
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Snip
On the Turkey spin; DD Smith and Pete Angelina put one in the bay at Strike. They still show the film at TPS. Interesting that the airplane recovered itself after the ejections altered the erect spin mode. -- Dudley Henriques The simulator would spin flat too. If you swept the wings and began pumping the stick, the nose would eventually fall through enough to effect recovery. BUT In the aircraft, the pilot was experiencing about 5 G eyeball out. Tough to do anything with the flight controls when you're munching on the armament control panel. I think that the ejection (action/reaction, thank you very much Mr. Newton) was sufficient to push the nose down into the recovery. Normally, you had to really hamburger the aircraft to spin it. BUT, an engine snuffed at high AOA was experienced as a wing dropping off. Just a little bit of inadvertent differential tail and off you went. I suspect the DFC had a dramatic improvement at the limit, albeit at some penalty to those who were really good at the limit. R / John |
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John Carrier wrote:
Snip On the Turkey spin; DD Smith and Pete Angelina put one in the bay at Strike. They still show the film at TPS. Interesting that the airplane recovered itself after the ejections altered the erect spin mode. -- Dudley Henriques The simulator would spin flat too. If you swept the wings and began pumping the stick, the nose would eventually fall through enough to effect recovery. BUT In the aircraft, the pilot was experiencing about 5 G eyeball out. Tough to do anything with the flight controls when you're munching on the armament control panel. I think that the ejection (action/reaction, thank you very much Mr. Newton) was sufficient to push the nose down into the recovery. Normally, you had to really hamburger the aircraft to spin it. BUT, an engine snuffed at high AOA was experienced as a wing dropping off. Just a little bit of inadvertent differential tail and off you went. I suspect the DFC had a dramatic improvement at the limit, albeit at some penalty to those who were really good at the limit. R / John They were testing for a new erect spin mode at Strike using the #619 engine test bed Turkey. They got it past PSG and it went flat. I can't remember if he used asymmetrical thrust and in spin aileron to make it go flat, but it did, and it accelerated to boot. The aoa was of course pegged and the aircraft had a fluctuating low level airspeed. DD was actually -7 sitting out front but Pete was almost through the spin axis so his ride was much smoother. They couldn't recover the aircraft. DD couldn't even reach the curtain as you might imagine :-) They finally got out. DD barely got his hands on the front handle but just enough to fire the seat. They recovered them both from the bay. DD showed us a photograph of his face taken in the hospital several days after the incident. You wouldn't believe how he looked. To me he looked like he had been in a fight with a T Rex who had done a job on his face. Every capillary in his eyes was ruptured and he was puffed out like no tomorrow. Best news was that they both survived. DD became a banker out in Ca. -- Dudley Henriques |
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SNIP
DD showed us a photograph of his face taken in the hospital several days after the incident. You wouldn't believe how he looked. To me he looked like he had been in a fight with a T Rex who had done a job on his face. Every capillary in his eyes was ruptured and he was puffed out like no tomorrow. Best news was that they both survived. DD became a banker out in Ca. -- Dudley Henriques My VF-191 XO had an experience in the photo F-8 in which he experienced considerable negative G. Ruptured the capilaries in the eyeballs. Blue eyes amidst a solid red field. New callsign? Why "REDEYE" of course. Docs told him he dodged a real bullet. R / John PS. You know what I like best about the Crusader community? The sea stories are outrageous and they're all TRUE. |
#10
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John Carrier wrote:
SNIP DD showed us a photograph of his face taken in the hospital several days after the incident. You wouldn't believe how he looked. To me he looked like he had been in a fight with a T Rex who had done a job on his face. Every capillary in his eyes was ruptured and he was puffed out like no tomorrow. Best news was that they both survived. DD became a banker out in Ca. -- Dudley Henriques My VF-191 XO had an experience in the photo F-8 in which he experienced considerable negative G. Ruptured the capilaries in the eyeballs. Blue eyes amidst a solid red field. New callsign? Why "REDEYE" of course. Docs told him he dodged a real bullet. R / John PS. You know what I like best about the Crusader community? The sea stories are outrageous and they're all TRUE. Yeah, it was one HELL of an airplane, under appreciated by many who didn't fly it and solidly loved by those who did. I've never had any of the fighters I was allowed to fly or flew on my own into the negative side spin wise, but I have had a great deal of experience doing inverted spins in the Pitts. It's a whole different world :-)) It's funny about inverted spins and perspective. I've had people watching me from the ground swear on a stack of bibles that I was spinning to the right when in actuality I was spinning to the left. From THEIR perspective, the airplane WAS spinning to the right :-))) I've had many fun hours playing with this scenario explaining it in war story "discussions" through the years. -- Dudley Henriques |
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