The development of Automatic Landing
PPRuNe Bashaholic
Moderator
Join Date: Jun 1997
Location: The Peoples Alcoholic Republic of Jockistan
Posts: 1,442
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I recall an "I learned about flying from that" story in Air Clues from the 80s submitted by a Canberra pilot who was diverting from a midlands airfield after the weather got bad. On the way to the alternate, he was passed to Bedford Approach on the way to his diversion destination. He heard a callsign in the radar circuit staing that he was going to do an ILS to roll (touch and go). Obviously, the weather at Bedford was better than our hero though, so he changed his destination and asked for vectors to the ILS. The other aircrat rolled in front of him, so he was suprised that he didn't see the lights at 200'. He was fed in again and had to go round a second time despite the other aircraft doing another roller. Now he was desparate. He had to land off the next approach or jump out. So he flew past minimums and got the lights in the flare. He taxied in with difficulty, shut down on fumes just as the other aircraft taxied past. It was a Varsity with the words "Blind Landing Experimental Unit" written on the side!
Thread Starter
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Grennwich, London
Posts: 9
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Landing in fog
Flt. Lt. Grogan
My apologies for not responding earlier to your addition to this thread but I saw it only recently. It is fascinating - not boring at all.
BLEU had carried out some fog flying in the early 1950s, mostly in the DH Devon. You and Pinky Stark were obviously doing it for real, in something rather larger. I certainly did not do any landings in fog during the development in Canberra WJ992, nor in fact in the Varsity.
Talking of WJ992, that venerable aircraft is no more except in virtual form as a bolt-on to the MS Flight Simulator, available as a download at http://www.flyingstations.com/canberra-pack-tugs-trainers.html. So I can “fly” in it again after 54 years!
My apologies for not responding earlier to your addition to this thread but I saw it only recently. It is fascinating - not boring at all.
BLEU had carried out some fog flying in the early 1950s, mostly in the DH Devon. You and Pinky Stark were obviously doing it for real, in something rather larger. I certainly did not do any landings in fog during the development in Canberra WJ992, nor in fact in the Varsity.
Talking of WJ992, that venerable aircraft is no more except in virtual form as a bolt-on to the MS Flight Simulator, available as a download at http://www.flyingstations.com/canberra-pack-tugs-trainers.html. So I can “fly” in it again after 54 years!
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Harwell
Age: 61
Posts: 45
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Thread Starter
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Grennwich, London
Posts: 9
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Thunderbird167
That is an interesting collection of photos. The latest one I have found, said to be at Hurn, was from 2007. A few months ago I sought local information on the current situation and was advised as follows by someone from the Bournemouth Aviation Museum: "The Museum has a cockpit/nose section of Canberra PR7 WT532 which we recovered from the Hurn Fire Dump and refurbished some 6 or 7 years ago. There is no formal scrapyard on the airport and during the past 20 years that I have been associated with the airfield I have not seen WJ 992. A number of various Mks of Canberras have arrived and departed." So there's something of a mystery!
That is an interesting collection of photos. The latest one I have found, said to be at Hurn, was from 2007. A few months ago I sought local information on the current situation and was advised as follows by someone from the Bournemouth Aviation Museum: "The Museum has a cockpit/nose section of Canberra PR7 WT532 which we recovered from the Hurn Fire Dump and refurbished some 6 or 7 years ago. There is no formal scrapyard on the airport and during the past 20 years that I have been associated with the airfield I have not seen WJ 992. A number of various Mks of Canberras have arrived and departed." So there's something of a mystery!