Some rather good film of F/A 18's messing about at sea
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Some rather good film of F/A 18's messing about at sea
Surprised by the lack of immersion suits or even gloves
https://www.youtube.com/embed/wfOD2y...layer_embedded
https://www.youtube.com/embed/wfOD2y...layer_embedded
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Ah, Ian Schmidt at work
https://www.youtube.com/user/CloudSu...uctions/videos
https://www.youtube.com/user/CloudSu...uctions/videos
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Surprised by the lack of immersion suits or even gloves
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I thought the gloves were for fire.
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Gloves or not
Gloves are a personal choice when flying over water, i.e. off the ship. If you end up in the water, the gloves become very, very slick and are a definite threat to getting rid and away from the chute. The chute is the biggest threat out there.
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Makes sense, thanks.
About what altitude are they making their passes abeam the carrier? I bet it would be a lot higher than it seems.
You really do get a sense of how small the boat looks to aviators who are about to land on it.
You really do get a sense of how small the boat looks to aviators who are about to land on it.
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About what altitude are they making their passes abeam the carrier? I bet it would be a lot higher than it seems.
500 knots
500 feet
.5 miles aft of the ship
Offiicially, NATOPS calls for 800 ft abeam the carrier on the upwind and 600 ft on the downwind, at 250 knots. And to starboard of the carrier. A hot pass is done to port (maximizes the eyeballs on your jet, which is kind of the point) and a hard turn and pull (about 6 g) to bleed off the airspeed with a slight climb to pattern altitude (600 ft) while dirtying up.
Last edited by KenV; 25th Feb 2015 at 13:51.
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The passes seem to be level with the radars (looking at the horizon) which would make them in the 200-300 ft ball park. I'm not convinced they're all actually joining the pattern. (At least one is past a small boy)
The USN use a harness to clip into the seat. It would be very hard to free yourself from the Koch fittings with wet gloves on. It requires dexterity in the fingers, not just the hand like a British QRF.
The USN use a harness to clip into the seat. It would be very hard to free yourself from the Koch fittings with wet gloves on. It requires dexterity in the fingers, not just the hand like a British QRF.