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-   -   Pictures of aircraft water-skiing? Genuine or not? (https://www.pprune.org/private-flying/212917-pictures-aircraft-water-skiing-genuine-not.html)

Flying Lawyer 25th Feb 2006 09:31

Pictures of aircraft water-skiing? Genuine or not?
 
Harvards water-skiing .....

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1...yer/T6_1sm.jpg


http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1...yer/T6_4sm.jpg


http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1...T6_team7sm.jpg


Extremely skilful even looking ahead .........

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1...team_crop1.jpg


......... but doing it while keeping formation!!

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1..._1271crop2.jpg



Not my pics. They were sent to me by a friend.

Anyone seen them display?


FL




As revealed later in this thread, the pictures are genuine.

They were taken by the renowned South African aviation photographer Frans Dely and have since been posted on various websites.

Lister Noble 25th Feb 2006 11:09

Amazing,I can't believe anyone could fly that accurately,but am obviously wrong.
Surely if they dipped the wheels in any further they would have a nose-in,
even a couple of inches would be enough?
Lister

2Donkeys 25th Feb 2006 11:13

Mixed feelings when I see pictures like that.

On the one hand, "Wow, amazing".

On the other, "What a shame they can't take such risks with a rather more 'disposable' aircraft type".

2D

Strepsils 25th Feb 2006 12:25

But what you can't see is the submarine that they're all welded to!;)

BRL 25th Feb 2006 12:40

They are brilliant pictures Tudor, they have put a big smile on my face today, thanks for posting them. :ok:

Lister Noble 25th Feb 2006 13:09

Just been talking to one of my flying pals and he has seen this happen,he reckons they are mostly crop sprayer pilots.
Lister

B2N2 25th Feb 2006 13:13

Many years ago I saw a documentary on the BBC about Europeans flying crop dusters in the Sudan spraying cotton fields.
They used to do this as entertainment after sitting on a remote airstrip for months.
L:} ooked scary then and looks scary now...

amazing though....

stiknruda 25th Feb 2006 13:58

Seen them? I believe I might be well acquainted with at least one of them!:eek:

mad_jock 25th Feb 2006 14:06

Would have thought that it would be nigh on impossible to get the wheels any deeper. The water would be like concrete at that speed.

I believe its quite a common sport round the world for tail draggers. I think there is a pic out of a DC3 doing it as well.

I would imagine though you would go from a looking dangerous and stupid but being OK. To really dangerous and stupid if you tried it in a tricycle gear aircraft.

Flying Lawyer 25th Feb 2006 14:10

Lister Noble

he reckons they are mostly crop sprayer pilots.
They could well be.

I learnt to fly a Harvard on a farm strip in Texas many years ago, and my check pilot was a cropduster. We flew along Padre Island one day - largely uninhabited, just off the coast, stretching for miles along the Gulf of Mexico - and I took up his suggestion of doing some low flying.
After a few miles along the deserted beach, through the headset came 'D'ya want me to show ya low flying?' (I thought I was.) I discovered our ideas of 'low' were very different. Wow!
As we turned to head for home, 'D'ya wanna try it? I'll watch ya.'
'Yes, Sirreee!'
:)

He took me up in a crop-duster before I left. (Single-seat, but a roomy cockpit - and many miles from any FAA eyes. ;) ) His precision and low level handling skills were absolutely phenomenal.
I'd always assumed cropdusters stayed above, or climbed over, any telephone lines/small power lines stretched across fields. Wrong!
'No way, wires can kill ya! Gotta stay under wire height in case ya don't see 'em. Anyways, if the farmers round here see daylight under your wheels they complain to the boss and won't pay.'
The first wing-over from virtually ground level when doing a 180 at the end of a field took me a little by surprise (to say the least), but it was one of the most exhilarating and exciting flights I've had yet.

I was lost in admiration for his skill, but it was just another day's work for him.
Every man to his job, as they say.

FL

Established Localiser 25th Feb 2006 15:55

You would just pray the Wasp on the inside of the windshield doesnt move :eek:
Flying Lawyer
Awesome story !!
They must know every inch of the aircrafts envelope !
EL

fireflybob 25th Feb 2006 16:35

Fantastic pics - would be good for a Caption Competition?

Shaggy Sheep Driver 25th Feb 2006 17:06


Originally Posted by mad_jock
Would have thought that it would be nigh on impossible to get the wheels any deeper. The water would be like concrete at that speed.

I've seen this sort of thing (on vid) before and wondered if the above is true. I can well imagine that the wheel tends to ride on the surface, and it would take a really hard push to get it to dig in. The picture of the guy surfing along in the T6 while looking at his formation partner seems to confirm that moderate forward stick pressure will hold the wheels just on the surface and you don't need to be looking ahead while doing this. But that plume of water could do nasty things to the tail with some aircraft if it hit it, I'd think.:oh:

SSD

Lister Noble 25th Feb 2006 17:09

I think the pilot who used the Pawnee to do our farm was South African ,and remember his name as Noel Kimvik,based at Southend,this would be in the early 80's
He was about 50 and when I asked about risks and fatalities he said,
"You see them either very young or my age,the ones in between are dead"
He also said he does occassionally take passengers squeezed in with him,my eyes lit up,then he told me I was the wrong sex!
Lister:)

G-CPTN 26th Feb 2006 00:53

Just come to this thread. As far as reality is concerned, I watched a programme on TV where Icelandic 'dragsters' ran across the surface of a (non-frozen) lake. The complete weight of the vehicle was supported by the surface of the water (provided they kept going and kept the power on). Programme was BBC Top Gear.
Point is that the aircraft will be 'supported' by the water.

Tarnished 26th Feb 2006 03:37

Sorry to burst the bubble, or is it surface tension on this but I think this is a good bit of photoshop magic.

Tarnished

alexflynn86 26th Feb 2006 07:54

I don't think it's photoshop... I reckon it's a bunch of pilots with foat ratings... They just forgot their floats! I mean hey, these things happen...:D

Sleeve Wing 26th Feb 2006 12:27

C'mon, guys.
I know it looks pretty calm but, I mean, ALL of them in contact ALL of the time ??
:sad: :rolleyes:

l_reason 26th Feb 2006 15:22

Here is the video of the off-road trucks DRIVING ON WATER!!!
http://www.heimska.com/video/torfaera_a%20_vatni.wmv
Landing a CUB ON water with no floats…. Kind of.
http://cubdriver749er.com/gallery.html
My money says there is no photoshop work here!

SkyHawk-N 26th Feb 2006 16:26

I think the pictures are fake. The reason? see below, a zoomed in portion of one of the pictures. Notice how the pixels surrounding the actual aircraft don't look smooth and feathered like the rest of the picture. :8

http://www.csharpprogrammer.com/pictures/gear.jpg

I think the aircraft have been 'pasted' over any existing picture of, say, water skiers or something similar. Could be wrong though.


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