'Flower's handful with her F18.
(This happened fairly recently).
CARRIER LANDING AT NITE, ONE ENG. OUT. I thought you'd find this interesting reading. A long time friend forwarded me this e-mail sent by his daughter who flys F-18's.... call sign "Flower" As a parent, I'd be shak'in after reading this....... but says volumes about the quality of the young people at sea today. Dear Mom and Dad, I tried to call you last night but the phones weren't up. Flying twice today, and am SSSSSSssOOOOOOOO tired. Only got 4 hours of sleep last night because the whole ship seemed to want to talk, and that took a long time and then adrenaline kept me up for a couple of hours more. Last night when I was coming in for a landing at 1200 feet and 250 knots (gear speed) when I lowered the gear, I felt two VIOLENT jolts , saw two huge flashes in my canopy, and my jet started falling out of the sky. Passed through 890 feet and 130 knots and then lost my HUD (flight instruments) for a second, which seemed like an eternity to me - knew I would have to eject if I didn't get some airspeed and altitude really quick. Thought my gear had blown off, based on the huge thumps just as I had lowered the gear; then thought I had lost both engines (TWO BANGS/flashes of light) but went to full afterburner hoping that one of my engines would give me some juice. The jet stopped descending/decelerating and I got my HUD back after what seemed like an eternity but was probably only a few seconds. I couldn't climb so I raised my gear and got my flaps to half and then the jet started slowly climbing, while yawing REALLY badly. I worked on getting to 5000 feet but knew that I was headed right to where the S-3's (tracker aircraft) hang out overhead the ship, so I declared an emergency, told Approach that I had just lost my right engine, and I needed them to clear the airspace for me. I wasn't sure if the stall had cleared at first so I went back up with the right throttle and every time I did, got the loud pop/BANG again so I brought it back to idle to try and clear - then got the 'RENG STALL' caution warning and had to shut it down - the engine had gone to crap anyway and just wasn't working for me at all. Once I had some airspeed and altitude, the XO got on the radio with me and worked the problem. It was nice to have him talk me through the rest of the emergency procedures and coordinate with approach to get me vectored back in. They tried to give me a right turn and I remembered what Dad told me, and said "Negative, I can't accept any right hand turns tonight - left turns ONLY". In an F-18 you can turn into a bad engine but the jet BARELY stays level in a turn single-engine with that engine at military power, so why try it? Anyway, the engine hadn't frozen up, so we cranked it to get my hydraulics (the gear is actuated with the right engine hyds and so is the refueling probe; usually we would have to emergency-extend but since the engine wasn't frozen we were able to crank it without fuel just to get my hyds back and lower my gear, refuel probe etc.). Brakes are also off the right eng hyd system, so I selected emergency brakes so I wouldn't try and use the normal ones. Then XO said "OK; tonight is the night to fly the best approach of your life." I was praying as I was doing everything basically from the time it started until the point when I walked off the flight deck. I thought to myself "OK; - let's do what we've practiced SO many times in the sim. DON'T get behind the power curve because one engine can't keep up with it. Wow, I'm glad I took so much extra time to practice this before I left because I know I can do it." Meantime, the XO said, "OK, if you don't get aboard the first time, we're going to have you hit the tanker" I thought "Negative; I'm not hanging out over the water with only one engine ANY longer than I have to, I'm getting aboard safely on THIS pass." I went through the worst-case scenarios in my head: "I lose my other engine, I have to eject. If I can't get gas from the tanker and I get down to 1.8, I'm going to have to go into the barricade." And I just started accepting the fact that these things might happen. I remember grabbing the beads on my SV-2 (what you pull to inflate the survival vest) to make sure I knew where they were. Didn't want to be in the water with full flight gear and not be able to inflate during the one swing that I might get in the chute before hitting the water. I started thinking about "the best pass of my life" that I needed to fly. I wanted to fly a slightly low approach. That way, you're adding power the entire approach, rather than a high pass where you have to be back on the power. Due to spool-up time, you need to be up on the throttle, and not back. And I wanted to fly slightly ahead of on-speed. That way, I still have the attitude to catch a wire but you also have a little pull of the nose to get some altitude if you need it. I thought to myself: "OK; I want you to sound really smooth on your 'ball call' - no nerves - make THEM calm down there." I also thought about how the com switch is on my right throttle, so I have to take my hand off my good throttle to talk and wanted to make my call as short as possible. You're supposed to say "307 Hornet ball, 3.5 single engine." I wanted to skip the "single engine" part and get my hand back to my left throttle but you're supposed to say it, so I did. I've only felt as terrified once before in my life as I did when I lost my engine and didn't know what happened, and that was at Fallon (Nevada), when I had jammed flight controls. I almost want to say that this was more terrifying, because I had a few seconds not knowing what was wrong and the thought that I might die flashed through my mind, because with no engines at that altitude and the amount of drag you have with your gear down, you have such a great rate of descent that you're probably out of the ejection envelope within a few seconds. I'm going to look it up and find out. But that flashed through my mind. I knew I couldn't wait very long to see if I could hold straight and level before giving it a shot and pulling the handle. The funny thing is that now, there I was coming in for a single engine landing at night having just been completely terrified but now completely calm, completely composed, knowing all the circumstances, all the possibilities but feeling calm and ready to bring it aboard. The XO had read me the NATOPS warning that going to afterburner/single-engine on a wave-off with greater-than-onspeed AOA could cause you to go out of control quickly. So I flew my approach slightly fast (meaning less AOA than onspeed) to give myself a little buffer, but I wasn't able to fly slightly low. So I found myself in the middle (directly between my 'ball call' at 3/4 mile and 400 feet), slightly high, and back on the power where I didn't want to be. I was watching for a little ball movement wanting to get back on glideslope early so that I could be up on the power at the ramp when I saw the settle. What would be a little settle with both engines I knew would run me into the ramp or damn close on single engine, so I went full afterburners. Then I heard "add a little power" from Paddles (the LSO): "Uh-OH! I'm already in AB." So I stayed in afterburner and heard "Po-WER!", saw the settle stop then saw the ball coming back up as Paddles called "EASY with it", and BAM! I was into the 2-wire for a good safe pass aboard. I sat there in the wires stunned for a second as Paddles and the air boss came over the radio to say "GOOD JOB FLOWER - REAL GOOD JOB!" But I thanked God for what HE had just done. My hook wouldn't come up, and I had to wait to be towed out of the wires. As they were towing me , I wanted to laugh and cry at the same time. I knew that how I acted now was how my reputation would be defined, so I got out of the jet, smiled, and said, "This jet is gonna be DOWN!" The deck guys loved it. When I went by Maintenance, I said "thanks for the good LEFT engine, but you can have your lemon back now." When I saw Paddles I said, "Piece of cake," but he knew I was joking. They gave me the 'OK-underline' score (the best pass you can get - reserved only for a really solid landing under really dire circumstances - usually the highest you can get is just an 'OK'). I've been congratulated by everyone from the CAG and DCAG to the Admiral. I can tell you of a zillion things that I should have done better. But the end result was a solid safe landing. I have the tape and will show it to you guys sometime. I'll save the "others" for another time. How can ANYONE not believe in God? They obviously haven't been single-engine in an F/A-18 trying to come home to the ship at night, and lived to sing the praises for having God as their pilot. I love and miss you guys, I will keep trying to call. (Sounds like the eng had a HP compressor stall or possibly a bleed valve sticking). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
Is it me, or is this all a bit familiar!!?:confused:
|
In an F-18 you can turn into a bad engine but the jet BARELY stays level in a turn single-engine with that engine at military power, so why try it? And the story sounds just like a story too. . . . Nice happy ending though :ok: |
Bl@@dy Americans.
:yuk: |
Jolly old tale until the end when we all started singing the praises of the Lord... :rolleyes:
oops! no religion in the bar! |
.... and there was me thinking I was just a cynical old b@st@rd !! :eek:
|
4PON4PIN
No its noy just you; seems a bit famil to me also. Approach mag? (USN crash comic) PS Is Flower a US Maureen? |
Not so much a Maureen more a Doris
|
Wonderful bed time storey!! Good night everybody.... soooo sleeeeppyyy.... zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
:zzz: :zzz: :zzz: :zzz: :zzz: |
Gods just great isn't he? He was there for this pilot but not for the people on the crashed Egyptian jet. Didn't turn up for the Philippinos in the recent bombing.............
Not wholly sold on God being the bloke to thank meself.... |
Join the navy! See the world. **** your pants.
|
What kind of pathetic muppet spends time writing that drivel and expecting us to believe that it's been sent in an e-mail from a cute little fighter pilots to her Mom and Daad.
Get a life you sad loser !! |
If this is true, then well done Flower.
But why would anyone write in such detail about their own heroics? In the UK, "It just wouldn't be on, old girl". It would read something like: "Had a fairly intersting time the other night. Lost an engine on a night recovery to the carrier. Still, with the help of the folks on the carrier I got it down in one piece - and they were kind enough to say that it was a pretty good landing." And the god-bothering notes would definitley have been kept private! To digress, we had a very cheerful Arab student going through a Hunter course at Valley. Not the usual prince or sheik's son, just a straight down the road mate. He'd only been speaking English for a couple of years, but did so fluently. On day they were supposed to go flying; the first T7 wouldn't start, the second had a gennie snag. They walked to the 3rd and fired it up; the radio was tits up. Back in the crewroom, the QFI said "Sorry, Sammi, it seems that Big G has decided were not going flying today". "No sir", said Sammi, "It's Big A who decides whether w*gs like me can go flying!" |
Load Toad,
The poor souls on board the Egyptian aircraft were mostly French, and as the French were against the God-Bush coalition for Truth, Justice and the American Way, clearly they would never be spared. As for the Phillipinos....well they must have just been sinners.......:yuk: |
They tried to give me a right turn and I remembered what Dad told me, and said "Negative, I can't accept any right hand turns tonight - left turns ONLY". In an F-18 you can turn into a bad engine but the jet BARELY stays level in a turn single-engine with that engine at military power, so why try it? sounds like a Blogger entry to me, but just in case the good lady herself were to come on to this forum and shame all us cynics by proving our doubfulness to be wrong, well done, if it actually happened. There we were, one engine gone, hardly any fuel, etc etc.... |
This must clearly be the work of God, otherwise she would been flying single engine!
Amen |
We readers of an anon. website have to keep an open mind about the contibutions of others.
I thought it unlikely a true pilot would have told the tale in such detail- especially to her parents- but if one of them was an ex-driver then it's more credible. A friend's daughter was very phlegmatic when mentioning to her dad that imminent prop csu failure (with a single) a few minutes after take-off had necessitated a direct return to airfield with the real prospect of an emergency put-down en route. If it is true, then all credit to the F18 girl for getting it back to the boards in one piece. The gender bashers out there might care to imagine how many macho top-gun types would have just given-up and pulled the red lever. In conversation with a gentleman prominent in aviation circles in the Midlands last year, I distinctly recall his mentioning an old friend of his has a daughter who flies F18's from carriers. So, Christopher Robin, BeAGLE, and Flap 62, it might just be true! |
As I wrote, if it's true, then well done, Flower.
|
Couldn't stay quiet any longer!
Can't maintain height on one motor? Perhaps if you are hogged RIGHT up - but at low fuel wt and (I'm assuming) EJing the stores if they are causing perf snags, no problem at all (even with the little 16k motors). The jet can overshoot (IMHE) in mil power on one engine even when fairly heavy (all things being equal) provided you are in 1/2 flap. However, I have never done a carrier landing (except in the bar of course), and I never intend doing one - to those who have and are: Well done and best of luck respectively! I never saw a red handle in my cockpit either - perhaps I should have had one fitted in case I lost my bottle:-) Anyway, it isn't a gender thing - I think bottle is independent of gender. Edited for correctness - I meant 'red lever' not 'red handle' - not that it matters, well I mean it obviously mattered enough for me to edit but........ And while I'm here - c'mon 50 and Roddy et al, give us your take - you've done the carrier thing :-) btw - congrats Roddy. 2 |
Something smells fishy here.. and its not the Navy!:ugh:
I thought it made a lovely little tale to read but found it hard to believe, not whether it was true or not, but whether it really was written by 'Flower' to her parents. I agree with BEagle - thats not how pilots tell tales of danger and excitment! Much too much detail, I know my mum wouldn't understand a word of it! Cheers for sticking up for the girlies Blandford50, but we're quite capable of sticking up for ourselves! There can't be a single pilot out there who hasn't gotten into a sticky one at some point, we are all trained to deal with it and thats what happens, training takes over. Its not a man or a woman dealing with, its a pilot. If its true then all credit to Flower but perhaps she should consider not blowing her own trumpet so much, the story was positively evangelical! Tee hee. |
All that was lackng was "I was just hoping be able to get down to taste a slice of Mom's good ol' Apple Pie".
Nobody believes this is real, do they?!! |
...............and the American national anthem playing at the end.:p
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If you look at some of the authors other posts, I think an extra large portion of Sodium Chloride is required to be digested whilst viewing such entries!!
If the salt doesnt do it the subject content will!! :ok: :ok: :yuk: :yuk: |
I thought I saw this played out on the last episode of JAG!:p
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Does anyone reckon that any child would freak out their parents this much? Practical jokes aside of course.
If any of us have as bad a day as this, we learn from it, remember every second of it and make damn sure that we do it better next time. We only go into detail with ourselves, and our C.O.'S if they care enough about the details not to just say "don't let it happen again..." I personally couldn't be stuffed giving that much detail to my parents, because I know they can't understand it, but as has been previously stated, if Flower's father is an ex nugget then he just might. But wouldn't the daughter then know better than to tell her mother about such an incident? I know from the point of view of being second generaton military that my mother didn't want to know about my father having a bad day, so I don't divulge to her any details. If she asks, I say the minimum to placate her fears. Aaargh, much ado about nothing... |
I thought the expression was:
Power Drag Trim Not a whole paragraph on 'it seemed like an eternity' and s'o I remembered to raise the gear' or words to that effect. Agree with Beagle, if it happened then well done but those words are not those of an Aircrew mate, let alone from one aircrew mate to another. |
Really you guys - - reading someone else's mail!
I'd hate to think of the comments that people would make about some of the letters I have written to Mom & Dad.
I wonder how Flower's Mom & Dad have communicated to her as she grew up? Did that shape how she now writes to them? Bet the story would look different written to us. What she said to the deck crew was different from what she was saying to Mom & Dad. So, her Dad takes this letter and sends it to some old buddy - howcome? So buddy shares the letter with us. Is it real, is it fake? Don't know. I just know the flying part can still get me going, just re-living the adrenalin rush of my own stories of "I learned about flying from that . . ." Here's a true carrier story: I flew an approach and landing onto a carrier. The wrinkle? The plane I flew was a C130 - yikes! They warned me I would have to be quick on the binders. So when I hit the deck I jumped on the brakes and tossed the throttles into reverse. I had to swerve to the edge of the boat (sailors hate that when you call their ship a "boat" - gets them riled every time) to miss hitting the superstructure with my wingtip. The end of the boat came up pretty fast - too fast! That was it - I had had my chance - over the end and into the drink!! Of course, this is a God story too - I thanked God this was only in the C130 simulator and not in the real thing! I still got wet but it was because I was sweating buckets - trainees tend to to that. Do what - go off the end of the carrier, or sweat buckets? Both!! You should have seen how I screwed up when I had a double engine out on the same wing! I thought I was doing pretty good until I landed and then the real fun began! That was another "thank God for simulators" story! So pick out the nuts and leave the shells - unless you can figure out a good use for the shells too insteading of just tossing them out. Still smiling . . .! |
Hmmm.
Erm. I flew 50ft LL through Scotland in a C130. At 3 times groundspeed. In the sim. Then went in close with a Tristar at 3000ft. Separation? About 30 feet. Oh yeah, and we were canopy to canopy as I flipped him the bird. And God? Yeah, he was there. I assume so because the instructor said "For God's sake, stop arsing around..." I don't write to my parents. :hmm: |
This smacks of 'Flower, CAG wants you to write an account of the incident for the Navy Safety Magazine. Write it and submit it to him for onward transmission'. Said girly writes acount, it gets passed to the editorial team, who decide to 'personalize' it as a 'letter home'. Typical American way of handling PR - the 'folks back home' syndrome...
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FJJP
Odds on you are right. |
What "hair on fire" selfrespecting F/A-18 pilot would call herself "Flower"!? :p
"Thank You, God! I'll take over now" is a cartoon from "There I was..." "Approach" features used to be in a different class - higher in my opinion. :cool: Best regards |
Here is an F/A-18 pilot that might have had problems turning:
http://www.aircraftresourcecenter.co.../story0011.htm Best regards |
Top Link NormallyLB!
:ok: Looks like the Yanks actually practise various friendly-fire tactics! |
Spugford,
Ssssh - it's the new top secret Fox 4 (ramming) technique we are trialling for BFM. Great for when you are out of missiles, angles or nrg. "Ramming speed Mr Scott" MT |
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