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Spitfire Ace - TV

Old 15th Jan 2004, 05:56
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My best guess is that it's going to be the Manchester lad, because he's more in awe and will say more emotive things than the RAF guy - particularly apparent when he talked about fighting in a Spit, he was very overwhelmed at how they could do that and fly at the same time with so little time on the aircraft. The RAF guy, brought up in that mold, was more "well, combat's something that you're trained for" - wouldn't attract the viewers.

That was might thought anyway - probably blasted out of the water next week!

Brilliant to see the BoB veterans talking about flying though - you could still see the sense of excitement in their faces and their voices - as if it was yesterday.
 
Old 15th Jan 2004, 08:59
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tiger moth: I wish i'd heard about this earlier so that i could have applied to be in it!
witchdoctor: I would like to have seen a bit more background leading to the selection (where did they get the poseur with the surf-bum hair and Wham stubble?)

Hi there,

I went along to the selection for this programme in May up at Elstree aerodrome. I got a call at work from the club that my name had been put forward for the selection as I met their criteria (can't recall what they were) and would I agree to go along? So like with a lot of things in flying I suppose, you don't apply, you get invited...

Anyway, I didn't get through

It was quite informal. We were all interviewed in the Cabair building by two young ladies One guy had more hours than C4 would have considered "realistic" for the tyro theme, so he left quite early.

My feelings were similar to what FNG writes in his post. I was excited by the fact that I might get to fly both a spitty and a tiger moth, but in the back of my mind I had the feeling I was on Aviation Big Brother which made me cringe and think why can't it just be normal without the wretched cameras...why won't they just let me and the aeroplanes be so we can spend some time together alone...oh well.

I only found out the whole thing was actually going ahead through someone I met on the day. Apparently there were some problems regarding the RAF and C4 using the Spit. I don't know any of the details though. I missed the programme on Monday but from what I hear it was no big deal. If it was anything like the Dambusters one it was probably a bit of a flop. I'll try and catch it next week and if I have any more thoughts I'll post them here.
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Old 15th Jan 2004, 15:32
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I think the Dambusters programme was rigged, to be honest.

Let's face it, the modern RAF crew apparently missed the target, but after "analysis" they found a "computer fault" and they'd actually hit it! Conspiracy!

Spitfire Ace was good though, IMO.
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Old 19th Jan 2004, 18:31
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Just to bring this to the top.

Monday 19th January Channel 4 2100 hrs, part 2
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Old 20th Jan 2004, 04:56
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G in a Spit.

Is it true that it was quite possible to pull the wings off a Spitfire, but not a Hurricane? Any idea of their limits?
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Old 20th Jan 2004, 05:18
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I'm so glad they are spending most of the programme with those admirable old pilots and a token amount on the 'new recruits'. No doubt the balance will change in the next two episodes, but it is just wonderful to learn new things, even insignificant details, about the BoB and what it was like for those gentlemen. It's also nice to see a few misconceptions shot down too.
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Old 20th Jan 2004, 15:28
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I think the makers of Spitfire Ace really deserve a lot of credit, on the basis of programmes 1 & 2. Given the Comet programme - which ended up with C4 having to apologise, when the Broadcasting Standards Commission found against the TV company - we might not have expected much: instead we get the real Battle of Britain heroes telling their story at length, in the manner of television documentaries from the 1960s and 1970s (what you might call the 'concentration span and credit-with-intelligence era of television').

Plus, of course, the bonus of cockpit cameras and first-rate sound.

AND the PPL won through! (Here, I must admit to an unashamed bias.)
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Old 20th Jan 2004, 17:38
  #28 (permalink)  
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I agree. It is a very good programme and with the comments of the BoB pilots it makes it very watchable and interesting. It is a pity though, that when 'showing' a picture of "Sailor" Milan of 74 Squadron fame, they showed a picture of Roland "Bee" Beamont instead!

Anyway very good. And no doubt that Dave Mallon deserves his chance to try 'combat.'
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Old 20th Jan 2004, 18:24
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How humble the older aces appear, what a refreshing programme, when we are so used to seeing utter cr@p. I don't suppose a programme such as this would cost any more than one of the soap episodes where the artistes get their over inflated pay cheques so why is it we have to put up with so much rubbish, so often?
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Old 20th Jan 2004, 19:14
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I'm amazed how fit the ex B of B pilots still appear to be, especially Geoffrey Wellum. I gather that when the B of B exhibition opened at Duxford the decibel count from the pilots gathered there was about equal to a Merlin at full boost. Several gave the impression that if there had been a few leather jackets and a couple of Mark 1 Spitfires available then they would have been off chasing the Hun.
With regard to the query about whether you could pull the wings off a Spitfire I heard Ray Hanna refute this at the meeting held to allay the fears of the local villagers round Duxford in the light of this year's incidents. I think I understood him to say that they could withstand something like 20g, far in excess of what a pilot without special kit could withstand. Of course if you had blacked out then those sorts of limits could be exceeded but in "normal" combat you would have been in the relatively safe range of 5-6G.
Perhaps one of the veterans could confirm this if they are on this site.
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Old 20th Jan 2004, 19:14
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G in a Spit

I don't know the limits off the top of my head, but I think the only problems they had with wings coming off were with the early Seafires, where the wings folded to fit on the carrier lifts.

I recall from Jeffrey Quill's autobiography that the structural failures which did occur were the result of C of G problems, which they cured by fitting bob weights to the elevators.

My uncle worked for Supermarine as an inspector and I remember him telling me about one of the later Spits (a Mark XIV I think) which they had back at Eastleigh for repair after it had tangled with an FW190.

The Spitfire pilot had got away by going into a steep dive followed by the 190. He managed to pull out at low level, but the 190 piled into the ground. When he got the Spitfire back to base, they found that the wing spars had been bent up about 10 degrees.

The aircraft was sent back to Supermarine for a thorough inspection and for a repair schedule to be formulated. It was eventually repaired and sent back to the squadron.

The spars on the Griffon Spits were solid rather than nested tubes, but it does show they were very strong indeed.

Re: the TV programme. I saw the second episode last night, and think it is getting better and better. As others have said, the veterans came across really well. Especially moving was Bob Doe saying how he had shot down a 109, but couldn't bring himself to finish off the obviously crippled aircraft. The pilot was subsequently rescued and went on to shoot down more RAF aircraft. What a dilemma to be faced with?!!

Looking forward to next Monday's episode.

RD
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Old 20th Jan 2004, 22:11
  #32 (permalink)  

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Rallye Driver

Don’t get me wrong please, this is not a smartarse nitpick, but I would like to clarify something in your post which could mislead some pilots. What was fitted to cure the effects of an aft CG making the aeroplane too light on the controls when pulling G (and so risking blackout for the pilot or overstress of the aeroplane) was a positive bob weight to the control run connected to the elevator. Positive in this context means it is fitted in the sense to pull the stick forward when g is applied. You can usually spot an aeroplane that has such a weight fitted because the stick will flop forward when the aircraft is parked.

Bob weights are not fitted to elevators themselves. Weights attached to elevators are mass balance weights used to reduce the chance of flutter of the control surface which might otherwise happen, especially at high IAS. Some aeroplanes wear their mass balances internally (in the leading edge of an aerodynamic horn) others externally – like the Vampire for example.

But I am sure that is what you meant.

Regards

John
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Old 21st Jan 2004, 06:33
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Thoroughly enjoyed the program and it made a pleasant change to hear the views of the airmen that kept the beasts flying.

Best quote for me...

"It looked like it were doin' 400 mile an 'our sat on the ground!"

Also what brought a lump to my throat was the idea of....

"strapping some young lad, younger than me in a cockpit and often he would never come back"

Well done C4 much better than the Dambusters effort.
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Old 21st Jan 2004, 17:54
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John

Thanks for clarifying that. It was what I meant, but not having the book to hand I had to write from memory (and memory always plays tricks!).

RD
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Old 28th Jan 2004, 17:24
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Not one comment about this week's episode! I wonder why?

Could it have been because it may have lost it's way? It was a great BoB history lesson, lots of good film, most of which we have seen before but very well put together. But precious little about Dave Mallon learning the skills it took to fly the Spitfire, a few seconds here and a few seconds there. The formation flying was, well, ordinary. Where were the aeros Pete Kynsey referred to, and had written on the briefing blackboard?

Have to say that this week was disappointing. The veterans told their story very well but none of it really got to grips with purpose of the prog.

Great shots of Dover, and the south east though.........
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Old 28th Jan 2004, 17:40
  #36 (permalink)  
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Surprisingly, the programme has developed into a worthwhile historical study, with some footage different from that usually shown in BoB progs, and many excellent contributions from veterans of the conflict. The shots of people flying around in the two seater are pretty enough, but seem increasingly irrelevant, particularly as there is virtually no examination of the process of flying the machine. This week's episode made the case for the vital roles played by (and subsequent shabby treatment of) Dowding and Park, and I found the softly spoken tribute to Dowding by the late Sir Christopher Foxley-Norris DSO distinctly moving.

Last edited by FNG; 28th Jan 2004 at 20:18.
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Old 28th Jan 2004, 20:04
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Thumbs up

I have to say that although the show has virtually eliminated Dave Mallon's learning process (which was supposedly the whole point of the show), I think the historical side has made this a very worthwhile series.
I'm so glad to see a historical look at the Battle which actually goes to the trouble of highlighting the vital role played by Dowding and Park.
As for the modern day stuff, some brief, but nice, air-to-air shots - more please! Pity we don't have more than one episode left. It would have been nice to achieve both the historical and modern trainee angle, but I guess I shouldn't be too greedy.
Well done to those involved in putting the show together.
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Old 28th Jan 2004, 23:38
  #38 (permalink)  
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I am in total agreement with the last two posts - ok, it has 'lost its way' as Pop puts it, but what a way it has found! I thought last night's programme was excellent in its B of B coverage, and Stephen Bungay impressed me no end with his research. I will make a point of getting a copy of his 2001 book on the history of the Battle of Britain I think.

I do hope we see a bit more of 'Dave' in the Spit, of course.
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Old 29th Jan 2004, 00:09
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I would also recommend the work done by Richard Overy, a thoughtful historian of a variety of WW2 subjects. See his own short book "The Battle" and the symposium product which he edited :"The Burning Blue". The latter contains contributions from Bob Doe and Hans Ekkehard-Bob, as featured in the programme, and some interesting reflections on the Battle in popular culture, history and legend, including a piece on the BoB feature film as a semi-documentary and part of the historiography
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Old 29th Jan 2004, 05:31
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Agree with previous posts that the BoB coverage, especially the contributions from the veterans, is facinating. But it's not delivering on what was promised.

Since Dave will not take off or land, will we see him being coached in aeros by Pete Kynsey? Carolyn's gentle coaching is interesting, but the occasional roar of wind through the canopy gaps indicates Dave, straight from the C152, hasn't yet found his rudder feet. Still, don't suppose they worried about that too much in 1940...

More of the Grace Spit and Dave, please

Vince
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