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-   -   Rolling the big ones? (https://www.pprune.org/aviation-history-nostalgia/423214-rolling-big-ones.html)

Cunliffe 5th Aug 2010 12:33

Rolling the big ones?
 
I was just wondering which large aircraft not designed for aerobatics have been deliberately rolled. The 707 and the Lancaster come to mind but I am sure there must be many others?
Maybe this has been covered in a previous thread in which case I aplologise and would ask to be pointed in the right direction.

Cunliffe

treadigraph 5th Aug 2010 12:57

The Vulcan at Farnborough by Roly Falk and others; Concorde by a French test pilot and, with the same TP, Brian Walpole.

John Jordan flew either a Warwick or Windsor inverted on at least one occasion - do I correctly recall photographic evidence of that?

In his book "The Saga of Iron Annie" Martin Caidin recounts a tale of bemused USAAF pilots at the close of the war watching a German crew trying to break a Ju-52 at altitude (and presumably with parachutes!) with various rolls and loops. They gave up and landed...

Hyperborean 5th Aug 2010 13:54

More years ago than I care to admit, a more senior (then) colleague claimed to have seen a Neptune rolled. My memory of the conversation is a bit hazy but I think barrel rolled was the claim.

dixi188 5th Aug 2010 14:23

Last year I think. Cimber ATR42 Rolled by chief pilot for an air show. Cost him his job I believe.

chevvron 5th Aug 2010 14:32

Ah but Roly Falk's excuse was that the Avro 707 was aerobatic and the Vulcan was just a bigger version of it.
The fatal A26 crash at Biggin many years ago comes to mind; I believe the pilot was trying to barrel roll it.
Any helicopter which rolls is doing a barrel roll too.

treadigraph 5th Aug 2010 16:31

The Biggin A-26 was certainly barrel rolled into the crash. There is a video out there of the Norwegian A-26 being rolled, though it appeared to be more of a climbing roll and concluded higher than started.

The Dutch F-27 used to go past the vertical in some of its more exuberent wing overs and I once saw it get to very nearly wings level inverted - surely a case of "you might as well keep going!"

sycamore 5th Aug 2010 18:03

Varsity at either Cranners or Oakington 65-66 ? GR was the pilot`s initials I believe..

wub 5th Aug 2010 18:18

The C-27 Spartan is rolled regularly at air displays and I've seen a B-1 rolled at Mildenhall

DozyWannabe 5th Aug 2010 23:18

Not a roll per se, but the RNZAF make their "mighty 757"s go practically vertical...

JEM60 6th Aug 2010 07:52

TREADIGRAPH.
Yep, the A26 in Scandinavia was certainly rolled, right in front of me and my Video Camera in fact, at an airshow at Gardemoen, and from memory, your remarks about it's execution are correct.
WUB.
You were lucky to see a full roll. All I saw from it were high speed departures and then going inverted, and coming back the same way, rather than completeing the full roll. Mildenhall Air Fetes. Good times!!.

wub 6th Aug 2010 12:57


You were lucky to see a full roll. All I saw from it were high speed departures and then going inverted, and coming back the same way, rather than completeing the full roll
YouTube - ‪Inverted Bone‬‎

JEM60 6th Aug 2010 15:10

WUB. Great. Thanks for that, I didn't doubt you, it's just that nobody had ever remarked to me that it went right round.:)

spekesoftly 6th Aug 2010 16:00


Varsity at either Cranners or Oakington 65-66 ? GR was the pilot`s initials I believe..
Probably the Oakington Varsity that looked rather crinkly afterwards. Flown by a student pilot if I recall correctly.

Dave Clarke Fife 6th Aug 2010 19:46


Originally Posted by wub (Post 5851070)
The C-27 Spartan is rolled regularly at air displays

About 1m10s in the C27J rolls very nicely.......................and loops at 1m 50s.....

YouTube - ‪AirPower 09 C-27J Spartan‬‎

treadigraph 6th Aug 2010 23:38

Hmmm, Ken FitzRoy commented on Varsities, rolls by previous students and lack of pitch authority at the flare ...

Exaviator 7th Aug 2010 01:09

Some years ago China Airlines unintentionally auto-rotated a B-747 with a load of passengers on board. The aircraft held together and continued its flight to the USA. However, the tail plane suffered more than a few wrinkles and it was some time before the aircraft flew again.:oh:

ICT_SLB 7th Aug 2010 03:22

I once visited the Flugbereitschaft (Luftwaffe Executive Squadron) at Port-Zwan (military side of Koln-Bonn). They had a several aircraft including Challengers, a VF614 and a then new Airbus - in the mess they boasted that all of their aircraft had been rolled & looped....

wub 12th Aug 2010 14:52

Just found this Vulcan footage on YouTube

YouTube - Avro Vulcan Roll

treadigraph 12th Aug 2010 15:29

ICT_SLB, they used to have four 707s as well... :)


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