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- 342 - RAF Form 414, Vol 25
Form 414, my RAF Logbook continues with me leaving Australia and the Hornet unhappily in my rear vision mirror as I was heading back to Blighty and a cold winter in Lincolnshire. No 229 Operational Conversion Unit was the training unit that would give me my first taste of the Mighty Fin, the Swing Wing Super Jet, Mother Riley’s Cardboard Aeroplane otherwise known as the Air Defence Variant of the Tornado.
Not just a British aircraft, the Tornado was a project involving Germany and Italy as well.
A cutaway of the ADV Tornado
Just some of the multitude of limitations that Tornado pilots were required to memorise
The Tornado cockpit showing the wing sweep lever
The Mighty Fins of 43 and 111 Squadrons
The RB199 lacked sufficient thrust to allow the F3 to perform adequately at medium and high level but it did have a way of going backwards!
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Surruno, Panavia, BAe, the RAF Museum, Mike Freer, Kevan Dickin, Chris Lofting and the RAF.Tue, 06 Feb 2024 - 19min - 341 - RAF Form 414, Vol 24
After I landed my aircraft I clambered out of the Hornet with the cold realisation that I might have flown my last sortie. The spinning sensation had ceased and the sortie had gone beautifully, it was almost as if it had been a bad dream. A continuation of tales from the Old Pilot's logbook, RAF Form 414.
Was the sun about to set on my career?
The surgery span round and round
Promotion
Exercise K89
One of our opponents, the F16
Firing off live missiles like the AIM 7M Sparrow
Landing in a thunderstorm
A week on Song Song island acting as the Range Safety Officer
The RSO and his crew of Malay troops
My final flight and the boys renamed my aircraft Nick The Pom!
Mon, 05 Feb 2024 - 21min - 340 - A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Moon
The year is 1957 and the space race is underway. The major powers around the world, mainly the Soviet Union and the United States, are all striving to develop the technology that will allow them to reach outer space. The Soviet Union’s Academy of Sciences prime aim was to beat the Americans into Earth orbit and their top secret Sputnik project was about to reward all the efforts put in by a generation of scientists and engineers. Sputnik 1 was soon to be placed atop an R-7 rocket and launched into a low orbit to become the first artificial Earth Satellite. But what if they hadn’t been the first?
Sputnik was fired into a low earth orbit on the 4th of October 1957 atop an R-7 rocket
Some months before the Sputnik launch the US were conducting nuclear tests
The Pascal I underground test caused a huge blue flame to erupt from the desert
Very high speed cameras were used to film the tests
The Horizons spacecraft
People wonder what became of the manhole cover and if anything was written on it?
Images under a Creative Commons licence with thanks to the Atomic Heritage Foundation, the Federal Government of the United States, NNSA and NASA.Mon, 05 Feb 2024 - 10min - 339 - Flight 600
Let me take you back to the dim distant past and Captain Jeff’s start with his legacy airline, ACME, I mean Delta, no ACME, Delta, Acta, Delme… oh whatever. His career started, not in the Captain’s seat but somewhere in the bowels of flight deck, sitting sideways with control panels in front of him instead of windows, that stretched to the ceiling! Jeff was an engineer on his favourite three holer, the Boeing 727. The loss rate for this iconic airliner was, unhappily, quite high. As of 2019 the aircraft had suffered 351 major incidents of which 119 resulted in a total loss. The loss of life resulting from these bare numbers has risen to over four thousand souls. One addition to those sad statistics came from Flight 600. This is the story.
The Boeing 727 Flight Deck
The 727 on its maiden flight
The famous S bend
With tail mounted engines the wings could be fitted with full span lift devices
The B727 was the first first airliner to have an APU
The 727 had rear mounted stairs that were used by the nefarious DB Cooper
Which resulted in the fitting of a Cooper Vane
The mechanics of a microburst
Our Captain Jeff
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Felix Goetting, Alex Beltyukov, Boeing, Tank67, Daderot, Juras14, Aero Icarus and NASA.Thu, 01 Feb 2024 - 18min - 338 - The Consequence of a Deliberate Act
Two of the Saratoga’s F14 Tomcats were tasked to defend the carrier against a simulated attack during Exercise Display Determination 87. The leader of this small formation included a senior pilot and skipper of a newly arrived Junior Grade Lieutenant Timothy Dorsey. Many years later, Dorsey would be nominated for promotion to a one-star Rear Admiral, an appointment that required Congressional approval. What stood in his way was an incident that occurred during that fateful day in 1987.
USS Saratoga
Timothy Dorsey
F14 Tomcats on deck
An F4 tanking
HUD film of the engagement
US Navy wings
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the US Navy, US Air Force and the US Gov.Thu, 01 Feb 2024 - 19min - 337 - Rocket Man Part 2
Part 2 of my interview with my mate Matt, steely eyed rocket man extraordinaire.
Goonhilly
Gyros and spacecraft in Telstar
The interior of Telstar
The magnitude of space junk around the world
The first live TV pictures transmitted via satellite
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to NASA, I Alison, Rama, NASA, US Gov, the BBC and Andrew BulkoThu, 01 Feb 2024 - 18min - 336 - Rocket Man
At first glance he looks to be a rather scruffy and unkempt elderly chap but behind the heavy glasses there are two twinkling eyes that reveal more than you can imagine. Indeed, appearances can be deceiving as this retired RAF Technician could have well been a steely eyed missile man as he controlled military satellites around during the Cold War. Meet my mate Matt!
Sputnik
RAF Oakhanger
Inmarsat equipment on board a ship
Not every launch was a success
Telstar
Voyager
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Nigel Chadwick, NRAO/AUI, Saber1983, the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, Dale Griffin USGS, then Science Museum and NSAS.Thu, 01 Feb 2024 - 18min - 335 - When History Repeats Itself
In the tale, the Applegate Memorandum, I described the difficult birth that McDonnell Douglas had with the DC-10 when it’s safety record was permanently marred by a cargo door design flaw that plagued its introduction. Sadly, this wasn’t the only issue that was going to discredit the aircraft in the eye of its passengers and they would ultimately condemn the world’s first 3 engined wide body as a dangerous failure. Although the aircraft’s problems with its cargo doors could be firmly laid at the feet of McDonnell Douglas, the next disaster that the aircraft would have to cope with was not of the manufacture’s making, but of some operators who took it upon themselves to shorten engineering procedures.
Then incident aircraft N110AA
Cutaway showing the configuration of the wing mounted engines
The DC10 cockpit
The last moments of American Airlines Flight 191
The aftermath
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the Dale Coleman, Jyra Sapphire, Jon Proctor, the Bureau of Aircraft Accident Archives, the NTSB, the US Gov and American Airlines.
Thu, 01 Feb 2024 - 21min - 334 - RAF Form 414, Vol 23
I left you last time after we had returned with our Hornets from New Zealand having had a very productive and interesting few weeks working with the Kiwi A4 Skyhawks. We soon settled back into our Squadron HQ at RAAF Williamtown and started to work up some Maritime Strike tactics against the ships of the Australian Navy. These were early days for the Australian Hornets and the anti ship missiles that were to be purchased had yet to be properly integrated into the aircraft’s weapons system... and so continues the Tales from the Old Pilot's Log Books.
The Hornets mix it with the Navy!
It was the P3 Orion's job to find the ships and broadcast their positions
The RAAF had yet to equip their F18s with anti ship missiles but that didn't stop us training
We flew affiliation sorties against the RAAF Caribous so I got the chance to observe from the other side of the engagement
Called in from leave to fly an engine air test I did so with my holiday beard still attached!
The rake of the Hornet seat didn't suit my back leading to a nagging problem
On our way to Malaysia we staged through Bali
At RMAF Butterworth we stayed in the beautiful old RAF Mess
And could frequently be found in the Hong Kong Bar
Back home in Australia I started to suffer from vertigo and wondered if the dream had come to an endTue, 30 Jan 2024 - 19min - 333 - The Wood Duck, Part 2
The conclusion of a chat over a pint with Wood Duck, the Royal Australian Air Force Air Attache to the Australian High Commission in London.
Images of No 2 OCU when it was equipped with the FA18
The handover of No 2 OCU Hornets to the new commanding officer and the new F35 Lightning fighters.
RSAF Hawk trainersTue, 03 Oct 2023 - 14min - 332 - The Wood Duck, Part 1
As a fighter pilot on the newly formed 77 Squadron Royal Australian Air Force, now equipped with brand new FA/18s, we had many experienced pilots but before long we also acquired pilots on their first operational type. One such pilot was Woody, or more formally known as Wood Duck and flying the Hornet was just the start of a long career in aviation that took him all around the world. Now the Air Attache at the Australian High Commission in London, Woody and I met at a local hostelry and had a beer whilst talking about old times.
The Australian FA/18B
Flypasts performed by No 2 OCU RAAF whilst under Woody's command
Woody as a youngster in the Hong Kong bar whilst on deployment in Malaysia.
RAAF Hornets in Butterworth
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the RAAF, the USAF, the RMAF and No 2 OCU RAAF.Tue, 03 Oct 2023 - 15min - 331 - The Risk Takers
So you want to be an airline pilot? You want to travel the world, visit strange and exotic countries and immerse yourself in the wonders of foreign cultures? You want to make a good living, bring up a family and plan for a wonderful retirement driving your luxurious RV around the wide open spaces of your beloved country? Has it crossed you mind that your chosen occupation might not be the safest way to achieve your dreams?
The Old Curmudgeon rides again
Airliner crashes are rare events
Ensure that you join a recognised union that can afford you legal representation anywhere in the worldTue, 03 Oct 2023 - 20min - 330 - RAF Form 414, Vol 22
I trust that you will recall the stories from my RAF Logbook which had reached the point of my first Hornet deployment to New Zealand to work with the Kiwi A4 Skyhawks of No 75 Squadron Royal New Zealand Air Force at Ohakea.
The squadron we were working with had a rich history and I was sure I was going to enjoy my time with them.
75 Sqn RNZAF formed with Wellingtons purchased by the New Zealand government
75 Sqn A4 Skyhawk
The Kiwi Red formation team
Inverted whilst in contact
An A4 in combat firing rockets
How to fly a flat scissors
An FA18 pulls into the vertical
The effectiveness of camouflage
Low level
Attacking a splash target
The Hornet at night
The disappearance of the hook was investigated
The perp was arrested!
75 Sqn RNZAF was sadly disbanded
Images shown under creative commons licence with thanks to the RAF, the New Zealand Defence Force, the USN, CNATRA, Bernardo Malfitano and Myself.
Thu, 31 Aug 2023 - 18min - 329 - Straighten Up and Fly Right
The Right Hand Traffic Rule stated that an aircraft which was flying within the United Kingdom in sight of the ground and following a road, railway, canal or coastline, or any other line of landmarks shall keep such line of landmarks on its left. For reasons that defeat me the rule went on to give an exception stating, “provided that this rule shall not apply to a helicopter following the Motorway M4 on a route from West Drayton to Osterley Lock!” Let me take you back to the the birth of commercial aviation in Europe after the First World War.Daimler Airways operated the De Havilland aircraft on the Croydon to Paris route and Grands Express were operating the same route, albeit originating from Paris. The scene was therefore set and, no doubt the astute amongst you will already be speculating on what befell the Daimler Airway mail flight departing Croydon on the 7th of April 1922 and the Grand Express aircraft that left Le Bourget on the same day, just after noon. This is that story.
The Farman Goliath airliner
The DH18
The BAS 500cc single Gold Star
London to Le Bourget
Le Bourget to London
Traffic in France drove on the right hand side
On that fateful day, the weather was poor
The Picardie accident was the world’s first mid air collision between airliners
Images shown under the Creative Commons licence with thanks to Albert Thuloup, Handley Page, BP, SADSM, The Library of Congress and Popular Mechanics.Tue, 15 Aug 2023 - 19min - 328 - Brass Monkeys
Traditionally the phrase Brass Monkeys goes hand in hand with weather so cold that only a naughty sounding description like, “It’s cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey,” will suffice. If, however, you were the crew member a NATO aircraft in Europe during the tense times of the Cold War, Brass Monkeys meant something very specific! It was a code phrase that everyone knew of and listened out for on the Guard frequency just in case it was broadcast. Two or three minutes into the flight Rikki was super-sonic and climbing through twenty thousand feet or so when the first “Brass Monkeys” call came over the radio: “Brass monkeys, brass monkeys, aircraft heading east at high speed fifty miles east of Gutersloh, brass monkeys”. He ignored it!
The true origin of Brass Monkeys has been lost in time
The identification papers of defector Viktor Belenko
Map of the East/West German airspace
An F84
West German Navy Sea Hawk
A Lightning F3 landing
Mig 21s chasing
Returning safely
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Louis-Philippe Crépin, images in the Public Domain, the CIA, the RAF, Rosario Van Tulpe, Milborne One and Mike Freer.
Tue, 15 Aug 2023 - 19min - 327 - RAF Form 414, Vol. 21
Life on 77 Squadron had settled down to a routine, if it ever really could on a fighter squadron. There was certainly plenty of variety to our flying. In one month I flew some practice bombing attacks, both day and night, on the Evans Head weapon’s range north by 230 nm. This was followed by a 4 ship formation demonstration of ground attack on our own airfield as part of an Open Day celebration for the public. Then night radar bombing on the Beecroft range at Jarvis bay about 150 nm south. Then we bombed and sank a tug boat before flying off to New Zealand.
The Squadron hours board
A head on view of the FA18A
Our Hornets in close formation
A MK82 low drag general purpose bomb
A 77 Sqn Hornet landing
RNZAF Strikemasters AKA the Bluntie
The RNZAF A4 Skyhawk
Landing at Ohakea
My old buddy John
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Myself and Greenshed.Fri, 11 Aug 2023 - 17min - 326 - Fifteen Hundred Hours
Marvin and Rebecca's first two flights of the day were cancelled due to high winds at Newark so they both waited in the crew room until their company dispatch released them for flight 3407 at 6pm, 4 and a half hours after their initial report time. Certainly for Rebecca, it had been a long time since she had done more than nap in a chair. Their flight to Buffalo was due to take 53 minutes and they were carrying 45 passengers which, along with their two cabin attendants meant that they had 49 souls onboard their Q400 aircraft. The pilots’ performance was likely impaired because of fatigue but to what extent could not be conclusively determined. However, they boiled down to the flight crew’s failure to monitor airspeed, the flight crew’s failure to adhere to sterile cockpit procedures, the Captain’s failure to effectively manage the flight and Colgan Air’s inadequate procedures for airspeed selection, management during approaches in icing conditions and training. This is the story of Colgan Air Flight 3407.
A Bombardier Q400
The SAAB 340
The DH Dash 8
Examples of wing icing
Stills from the NTSB accident report
Stills from the NTSB accident report
Stills from the NTSB accident report
The wreckage of Flight 3407
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Lord of the Wings, Bill Abbott, Steve Fitzgerald, NASA and the NTSB.Thu, 10 Aug 2023 - 21min - 325 - Great Uncle Baz
With thanks to listener Sam Dawson who has such interesting relatives and to Betty Goerke, the author of a book about Baz Bagby, A Broken Propeller. I am pleased to present the story of Sam Dawson's Great Uncle Baz.
Stunt pilot Lincoln Beachey at Niagara
The 1st Aero Squadron
Early Aerial Reconnaissance
The 88th Aero Squadron
General Billy Mitchell
The start of the Great Transcontinental Air Race
Great Uncle Baz
Images under creative commons licence with thanks to the Library of Congress, the USAAC, the USAF, the RFC, the US Army, the National Archives and SADSM.
Sun, 06 Aug 2023 - 19min - 324 - RAF Form 414, Vol. 20
The continuation of my log book tales, otherwise known as RAF Form 414, and we are up to Volume 20. Apart from other asides, this tale deals with my accidental overflight of a very secret satellite surveillance base run by the Australians and the CIA!
Overflying Uluru (Ayres Rock)
My arrival at Alice Springs airport
My 'circumnavigation' of Australia
My aircraft being impounded on arrival at RAAF Pearce
Seeing my father at the 1881 Resturant
The Great Australian Bight
Passing through RAAF Edinburgh
Looking back through the fins
Heading home to Williamtown
Images under creative commons licence with thanks to Myself, Nachoman-au and Google Earth.Fri, 04 Aug 2023 - 21min - 323 - The Applegate Memorandum
The DC-10 was McDonnell Douglas's first commercial airliner project since the merger between McDonnell Aircraft Corporation and the Douglas Aircraft Company in 1967. It started life on the drawing boards as a 4 engined, double decked, wide body airliner that could carry 550 passengers but morphed into single deck, three engined aircraft that could carry one passenger short of 400! In what was expected to be a knockout blow to the competing Lockheed L-1011, the President of American Airlines and James McDonnell of McDonnell Douglas announced American Airlines' intention to acquire the DC-10. Flight 96 was en route between Detroit and Buffalo when, above the city of Windsor in Ontario whilst climbing through 11,750 ft the flight crew heard a distinct thud and dirt and debris flew up from the cockpit floor into their faces. On inspection it was obvious that the rear cargo door had detached from the aircraft. This is the story of the DC-10 cargo door issue and the engineer who tried to warn the company of the dire problem.
The 4 Engined Douglas Proposal
The DC-10
The Cargo Door
The Cargo Door of Flight 96
The Accident Report of Turkish Airlines Flight 981
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the SDASM archives, the Douglas Aircraft Corp, U.S. National Archives and Records Administration, the FAA and the DOT AIB.Thu, 03 Aug 2023 - 21min - 322 - RAF Form 414, Vol. 19
Telling the tale of my flying career, I left you at the end of my F/A18 conversion course as we reformed the No 77 Royal Australian Air Force Squadron with their brand new Hornets. So far our one and only aircraft A21-5 was being shared around and everyone wanted a piece of it, either to fly or learn how to fix it. The squadron execs were pretty busy dealing with the job of getting the new squadron personnel squared away so the rest of us got more than our share of flying. There wasn’t much we could do with a single jet but I was happy just to play with a multi million dollar toy and get used to my new home.
The M61A Vulcan Cannon
The 'Pig' Australian F111
My route around Australia
Mt Isa
Arriving at Darwin
Uluru through the HUD
Pine Gap
Alice Springs
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Peter Gronemann, General Dynamics, Fhrx, and Google Maps.Thu, 20 Apr 2023 - 19min - 321 - Sailing Off to Hawaii
Hawaii became the most recent state to join the union in 1959 and is now the third wealthiest. Following it’s annexation, Hawaii became an important naval base for the US Navy so it is hardly surprising that they should be the first to attempt a flight from the US mainland to the island. Aviation had already arrived at the islands in 1910 courtesy of Bud Mars, the Curtiss Daredevil.
The Hawaiian Archipelago
The annexation of Hawaii
J C Mars
Commander John Rodgers
Rodgers in the Wright Flyer
The PN9 flying boat
Rodgers and his crew survive to be welcomed into Hawaii
The Atlantic-Fokker C-2 Tri-motor
Atlantic-Fokker C-2 "Bird of Paradise" arrival in Hawaii
The start of the Dole Air Race
In all, six aircraft were lost or damaged beyond repair and ten lives lost.
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Google Map Images, Bain News Service, Harris and Ewing, the Library of Congress, Hawaii Aviation, the USAF and the SDASM.
Images under Creatiove Commons licence with thanks toSun, 16 Apr 2023 - 20min - 320 - Crash Investigation is No Accident
It was the 13th of May 1912, a Monday, when a Flanders F3 Monoplane took off from Brooklands in Surrey, a county of England. The pilot was the aviation pioneer Edward Victor Beauchamp Fisher and his passenger the American millionaire Victor Mason. Fisher had an Aviator’s Certificate, the 77th to be issued, had learned to fly at Brooklands and was a flying instructor there. He had also worked with both A V Roe (the founder of Avro) and Howard Flanders, whose monoplane he was flying at the time. The two men had made two or three circuits of the airfield at about 100ft, the 60 hp Green engine operating well when, in a left turn, the aircraft fell to the ground killing both the aviator and his passenger before catching alight and burning. In the early days of aviation such accidents were fairly common but what sets this one apart is that it was the first in history to become the subject of an accident investigation by an official civilian body… the Public Safety and Accidents Investigation Committee of the Royal Aero Club.
Brooklands airfield and motor racing circuit circa 1907
The Flanders F3/4
The Wright crash
Lt Frank Lahm
The 1920 Air Navigation Act
The 1926 formation of the NTSB
NTSB Investigators
The Challenger disaster
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Daimler Chrysler AG, Bain News Service, National Museum of Health and Medicine, the USAF, UK Gov, NTSB and the Kennedy Space Centre.Sun, 16 Apr 2023 - 20min - 319 - The Twelve Crashes of Christmas
The 12 days of Christmas are generally thought to run from the 26th of December to the 6th of January and is an important period of religious celebration or for those of us who observe Christmas in a more secular manner, it’s more likely to be a traditional time of recovery following our holiday excesses and to welcome in the New Year. Of course, those of us in the Aviation industry often remember dates by events that occurred on a particular day and the most memorable are often the most tragic. With that in mind I present the 12 crashes of Christmas.
The TU144
Earthrise from Apollo 8
The Lockheed A-12 Oxcart
The C-130
The Avro Ten
The Vickers Wellington
The Handley Page O
The captured bomber
Gustav Hamel and Eleanor Trehawke Davies
Leonardo da Vinci's Vitruvian Man
The Flying Machine
The Convair 440 Metropolitan airliner
Amelia Mary Earhart
Earhart's Electra
Amy Johnson
A Finnish Fokker
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Michel Gilliand, NASA, the USAF, State Library of Queensland, the RAF, US National Archives, the Rijksmuseum, Luc Viatour, SDASM,and those images within the Public Domain.Thu, 13 Apr 2023 - 21min - 318 - Around the World in 20 Days
Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier was one of two men who left the earth's surface and flew in Montgolfier's balloon for the very first time. He also designed a type of balloon that was given his name that flew using a combination of a lifting gas and hot air. More than 200 years later, his design would be used in the balloon that made the first non stop round the world flight.
A Rozièr balloon
Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier in a Montgolfier balloon
De Rozièr perishes in a baloon crash over Wimereux
Don Cameron led the way in record breaking and unusual balloon design
Double Eagle II
Virgin Flyer
The successful balloon circumnavigation by Piccard and Jones
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to those Public Domain images available, NASA, the Smithsonian,The Virgin Group, Cameron balloons and Breitling.Mon, 20 Feb 2023 - 19min - 317 - Only a Flat Tyre
Each year upwards of 2 million of the faithful make the journey to follow the path of the profit Muhammad to a number of holy sites before their pilgrimage rites are considered complete. Muslims from around the world make this journey which, in modern times, is often completed using air travel, as it was in 1991 when Nigeria Airways wet leased a Douglas DC8 operated by Nationair Canada to help them cope with the season’s increase in passenger traffic due to the Hajj. Under the hot sun of the Arabian desert, the scene was set for a disaster.
A Nationair DC8
King Abdulaziz International airport in Jeddah
The Maintenance Record analysis
The DC8 gear
A typical brake fire
Excerpt from the accident report
Excerpt from the accident report
Conditions in the cabin became unsurvivable
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Pedro Aragão, Yousefmadari, ICAO and the USAF.Fri, 17 Feb 2023 - 18min - 316 - Higher, Faster
They were the pioneers who trod the territory beyond the sound barrier… a place no man had ever been before and which had killed many who attempted the journey. The rocket powered, winged bullet first flew only 42 years after man’s first powered flight, an achievement that still astounds me. To think that a toddler around at Kitty Hawk who saw one of the Wright Brothers first flights, could have heard the world’s first man made sonic boom before they reached the ripe old age of 50 is a true testament to the ability of America’s finest minds and the bravery of their greatest pilots.
The Bell X1 in flight
The Miles M52
The X Planes
US Military astronaut wings
The X2 drop
The X2 crash
The X15
An X15 launch
Armstrong with the X15
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to NASA, the RAF, the USAF, NPRC,Fri, 17 Feb 2023 - 21min - 315 - RAF Form 414, Vol 18
It's time for another of my flying logbook tales and it’s May 1987 and I’m on the Australian FA18 No 2 Operational Conversion Unit at RAAF Williamtown starting the final phase on course 1 of 87 before moving onto No 77 Squadron which was to be my home for the next few years.
An FA/18B with a pair of BDU33 practice bomb carriers
The Salt Ash bombing range
A practice bomb strikes the centre of the target
The CCIP aiming symbology
Mk 82 500lb General Purpose bombs
RAAF Townsville
Mk82s hitting the target on Cordelia Island
Course graduation
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the Welcome Collection and the USAF.Fri, 17 Feb 2023 - 18min - 314 - Sherman Smoot – A Tribute
A tribute to Sherman Smoot, friend of the APG Show, who died doing what he loved best... flying.
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Capt Nick Anderson.
Thu, 19 Jan 2023 - 17min - 313 - The Battle Above the Somme
The First World War battle of the Somme continues, to this day, to fascinate and appal in equal measures. Much has been written about the ground war the first day of which saw the greatest number of British casualties than had occurred before in the entire history of the British Army… 19,240 were dead and 38,230 injured. The fighting over a 16 mile front lasted almost 5 months, after which the Allied troops had advanced about 6 miles. The butchers bill of casualties was horrendous. The combined Commonwealth countries number reached nearly 60,000 but was dwarfed by the United Kingdom’s casualty number of over 350,000. The battle opened on the 1st of July 1916 with a massed explosion that ranks amongst the largest non nuclear explosions in history and was then considered the loudest human made sound to date, audible beyond London 160 miles away. It was witnessed by an 18 year old RFC pilot.
The mine under Hawthorn Ridge
Then the dust cleared and we saw the two white eyes of the craters
Going over the top
The la Boisselle mine crater now and then.
Pip's landing
The Fokker Eindecker
Bristol Fighters
A dogfight
The battlefield
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to British First World War Air Service Photo Section, Ernest Brooks, Henry Armytage Sanders, H. D. Girdwood, the RFC and the IWM.Thu, 19 Jan 2023 - 19min - 312 - Batman and Robin
Robin Olds was a hard drinking, hard working man who led from the front in a way that inspired his men to become a great fighting force. He only became frustrated when he saw mistakes being made by those above him who should have known better and he went out of his way to make his feelings known. He defined what it meant to be a fighter pilot, not only in the air but on the ground with the stunningly beautiful Hollywood actress, Ella Raines, the first of his 4 wives.
The court-martial of General William "Billy" Mitchell 1925
West Point students
A P-38 Lightning
A digital representation of SCAT II
A Bf109
Olds and his P51 Mustang SCAT VI
A P80 Shooting Star
The Gloster Meteor
An F86 Sabre of the 71st, Hat in the Ring Sqn
The F4 Phantom
Robin Olds completes his 100th combat mission
Robin Olds in Vietnam after his 4th Mig kill
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to those images in the Public Domain, the Bundesarchive, the USAF, Digital Combat Simulator, Ruffneck88, USAF National Museum and RuthAS.Mon, 16 Jan 2023 - 20min - 311 - The Grade 2 Listed Centrifuge
A recent news programme caught my eye when I realised it involved our great friends at the Farnborough Aviation Sciences Trust museum. It reminded me of the group of sadistic so-called doctors who populated the Institute of Aviation Medicine and tortured generations of unsuspecting and innocent RAF aircrew in machines such as the one the article featured, a centrifuge! This aforementioned device which resembles a vast witch’s ducking stool crossed with an iron maiden, first operated in 1955 but was decommissioned as recently as 2019 and has now received Grade 2 protection.
The Institute of Aviation Medicine
The Farnborough Centrifuge
The Cecil Hotel with it's red and white ornate frontage
The august medical journal, the Lancet
Early versions of oxygen masks
An early mobile decompression chamber
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the RAF, FAST museum, The Library of Congress, those images within the Public Domain and the National Museum of Health & Medicine.
Mon, 16 Jan 2023 - 20min - 310 - RAF Form 414, Vol. 17
The story of my military flying career continues with the new challenge of flying the FA/18 Hornet round the beautiful skies of Australia.
The official crest of No 77 Sqn RAAF with its Grumpy Monkey
The 77 Sqn Mirages
The helmet fitting
An FA/18A cockpit
Sunset
The Head Up Display
The location of RAAF Williamtown
Firing the gun
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Nick Anderson and Google Earth.Mon, 28 Nov 2022 - 19min - 309 - Oh Canada, Our UFO
Featured in a Scientific magazine which offered a first look inside the USAF's new jet fighter, the F-89 Scorpion was to have an interesting history which involved the Battle of Palmdale and a top secret Canadian UFO!
A Scientific Magazine cutaway drawing
The Fly-off competitors
The Northrop F89 Scorpion
The 437th Fighter Interceptor Squadron
An F6F Hellcat red drone
Mighty Mouse rockets
1st Lt Moncla
The Canadian UFO
The official USAF report
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Scientific magazine, the USAF, USN, NASA, SDASM, RKO Pictures and those available through Fair Use and Public Domain.Mon, 28 Nov 2022 - 19min - 308 - The Wing That Broke Jack Northrop
Arguably one of the most talented and innovative aircraft developers of his time, John Knudsen Northrop had long sought an aircraft design that could start a revolution… a craft with minimum drag and a level of lift unachievable in any other form. Jack, as John Northrop was usually known, pursued his dream of building a pure flying wing strategic bomber that would exceed the capabilities of anything else his less imaginative competitors were designing.
The gliders of Otto Lilienthal
The Armstrong Whitworth AW-52
The Avion/Northrop Experimental No1 pusher
The remains of a Horton flying wing
The Northrop N1M
Nortons XB35
The XP-79 fighter
The XB-49
The YB-35s being broken up at the cancelation of the project
The final successful B-2 Spirit
Images shown under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the USAF, the Library of Congress, Northrop, National Museum of the Air Force, Michael.katzmann, the IWM, Sanjay Acharya, the National Archive and NASA.Mon, 29 Aug 2022 - 20min - 307 - The Eager Beavers
It was an unpopular aircraft because, well… a lot of aircrew were superstitious. They were renown for carrying lucky charms, doing things a certain way and never daring to change the habit because it worked for them last time. Their machine was a B17 nicknamed Old 666 taken from the last 3 digits of its tail number 41-2666 and they were the Eager Beavers!
Old 666
The Martin B-26 Marauder
The B-17 bombing Japanese shipping North of Australia
The B-17's waist guns
The route for their recce sortie over Bougainville
The Japanese Zero
A Zero passes close aboard
The damage to Old 666
The brave crew fight the Zeros off
Jay Zeamer receives his Medal of Honor
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the USAAF, Mark Wagner, USAF, USAAC, Gary Fortington, US National Archives and Records Administration, SDASM, Steve Jurvetson and those in the Public Domain or orphaned.Mon, 29 Aug 2022 - 19min - 306 - RAF Form 414, Vol. 16
The conclusion of one of the hardest flying courses in the Royal Air Force, the QWI course. What faced us was the culmination of all our efforts over the past months of flying in the form of a week of intense work, drawing together everything we had learned. We had to fly a series of missions against all comers, demonstrating our level of leadership, control, tactics, formation management, aggression and skill. These sorties were complex and demanding, involving tactics we devised to allow us to fly without the use of the radio from start to finish.
The RAF's F4 Phantom
The East German border
The Nicholson Trophy for best student on the course
Off to a specialist burns unit in an RAF Search and Rescue Sea King
Packing up our married quarter for Australia
The delights of Hong Kong
My tropical uniform
The last leg to to Australia
Our little married Quarter at RAAF Williamtown
Meeting our neighbours at street BBQ
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the RAF and the author.Mon, 29 Aug 2022 - 18min - 305 - Amy, Wonderful Amy
The 1920’s and 30’s were times of radical societal changes, particularly in the freedoms that women then demanded. The suffragette movement, the contributions made by women in the first world war and other dramatic events had clearly shown that forward looking women were no longer going to be content with the roles that men decided they were suited for. Aviation played its part in allowing women the freedom to tackle challenges that were previously denied to them, a fight for equality continues to this day. It is right that we celebrate those early pioneers who took to the air and led the way.
The Suffragette movement which paved the way for woman's emancipation
Will Hay, one of Amy's flying instructors
Amy's planned route to Australia
Amy's Gypsy Moth, "Jason"
Amy in India
Amy arrives in Australia
An Airspeed Oxford and notice of Amy's "MISSING BELIEVED KILLED," telegram
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to those in the Public Domain, the National Library of Australia, the UK National Archives, Bob Brown, the Queenslander, SADSM and those of unknown copyright.Mon, 29 Aug 2022 - 19min - 304 - Captain Anderson – The Crash!
An air hostess calmly walked through the crashing airliner telling the passengers, “Please fasten your safety-belts. Keep your seats.” Then she returned to the galley near the tail, sat herself down… and waited. One of the passengers had seen oil spurting from an engine and on the flight deck, Captain Anderson was nursing his aircraft in. The engine had failed not long after takeoff following that massive oil leak and this aircraft didn’t have a good reputation for single engined flying.
An Airwork Viking
The Nene powered Viking
The BEA Viking that survived a bomb explosion intended to bring the aircraft down
Airwork employed a number of Vikings that flew as far afield as South Africa
The aftermath of the crash
Air Hostess Beryl Rothwell
Capt Anderson's youngest son, Nicholas James
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Norsk Luftfartsmuseum, BAe, the Daily Sketch, the AAIB, UK Gov, Vickers and Ruth AS.Mon, 29 Aug 2022 - 18min - 303 - The Ugly Ducklings
Whilst we are discussing quaint idioms, many of us trust that old American adage, “If it looks good, it’ll fly good” attributed to both Neil Armstrong and Bill Lear and is something that all pilots understand. There is something about a fine looking aircraft that makes it appear trustworthy and gives one confidence that it will perform well. Sadly, I know of one company, however, who seem to have looked at their aircraft through bottle bottom glasses… or perhaps they never got the memo.
The Dunne D5
The Type 184
The Cardington Gasbag
The Shorts S38
The Singapore
The Shorts Empire flying boat
The Sunderland
The COW gun
The Sunderland's internal bomb racks
The Sunderland's rest facilities
The Bombay
The long legged Stirling
The unlikely looking Seamew
Hurel-Dubois Miles 106 Caravan
The Shorts SC 7 Skyvan
The Shorts SD360
The coolest Skyvan ever... Pink!
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Marinha do Brasil, Short Bros of Cardington, the RAF, Shorts, the Library of Congress, SADSM, George Jackman, the Royal Navy, Adrian Pingstone, Tomás Del Coro and those images orphaned or in the Public Domain.Mon, 04 Jul 2022 - 19min - 302 - The Fall of American One
The aircraft was named ‘Flagship District of Columbia’ and was only the 12th Boeing 707 ever made. It was delivered to American Airlines in February 1959 so at the time America was taking its first steps into the void of outer space it was a mere 3 years old. It hadn’t long been out of it’s periodic inspection and with less than 8,000 hours on the airframe N7506A was expected to have a long and productive life ahead… a wish that would be dashed in a few short minutes.
The New York skyline
An American Airlines Boeing 707 at LAX
Changes in apparent span and the effects of sideslip on a swept wing when yawed
The 707 rudder control system
Wreckage from American Airlines flight 514
The Calverton crash still smoking
A New York ticker tape parade
The flight recorder trace from the American One's final moments
A reconstruction of the track of Flight One
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Jon Proctor, San Diego Air & Space Museum Archives, the Civil Aeronautics Board and Ted Quackenbush.Thu, 05 May 2022 - 20min - 301 - RAF Form 414, Vol. 15
The Royal Air Force’s Pilots Flying Logbook is a sturdy publication, cloth bound in blue with gold printing on the cover, on the inside of which are the instructions for use. Para 1, sub para (a) it states that the Book is an official document and is the property of Her Majesty’s Government… well, good luck trying to get this one back!
The star of the Top Gun movie
The much admired RAF Phantom QWI badge
The island of Cyprus was famous for its rough red Kokinelli wine
The 20mm SUU23A Vulcan cannon
A typical Cypriot meze
Mrs A moving yet again
Receiving my 1000hrs Phantom badge
The F4 rear office
The arrival of son No1
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Gage Skidmore, Google Earth, Thomas Fedor and Cyprus Tourism.Thu, 05 May 2022 - 18min - 300 - Don’t Upset the Jet 2
Last week we chatted about historic incidents that led to aircraft upsets. This week we talk to a newly qualified airline pilot who is undergoing advanced Upset and Recovery Training at a British training school. We also speak to the school's chief pilot and one of the instructors, an ex Mig 29 pilot.
Basem undergoing upset training at BAA in a Grob
One of the BAA's Extras
Basem off to be turned upside down!
Adrian... Basem's ex Mig 29 instructor
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Capt Nick AndersonMon, 11 Apr 2022 - 18min - 299 - Don’t Upset the Jet 1
With the arrival of jet powered airliners, commercial pilots entered a new world of high altitude flying in large swept wing aircraft at velocities approaching the speed of sound. They were often unprepared for the challenge and before long unexpected and unexplained loss of control events began to worry the world of aviation. These events initially occurred when an aircraft was upset from its normal benign straight and level environment and ended up in a high speed dive, something that was rare in the earlier days of straight winged, piston powered airliners. Hence, they became known as Jet Upsets.
Coffin Corner!
Upsets involve extreme attitudes
Less than perfect cockpit design often contributes to upsets
A Pan Am B707
China Airlines A300
The tragic result of the China Airlines upset
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Boeing Company, Geni, the NTSB/CAB, Guido Allieri and the JTSB.Thu, 07 Apr 2022 - 20min - 298 - Giants of Ukraine
In the world of Slavic folk tales there are giants in Ukraine but as aviators the ones we are interested are the giants that the fabled aircraft designer Oleg Antonov designed. This is his story.
The OKA1 glider
Antonov at the Leningrad Polytechnic
The OKA38 Stork
The An-2
The An-12 Cub
The An-24 Coke
The vast An-22 Cock
The huge An-124 Condor
The flight deck of the An-124
The mighty Mryia, An-225, carrying a Buran project space shuttle
The destruction of a dream, the Mryia was a victim of the Russian invaders who recently attacked Ukraine
Oleg Antonov
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the Antonov Design Bureau, the Leningrad Polytechnic Institute, the Central Design Bureau for Gliders, Arpingstone, Igor Dvurekov, Dmitriy Pichugin, Toshi Aoki, Yevgeny Pashnin, Vasiliy Kob and Дизайнер: А.Безменов.
Thu, 17 Mar 2022 - 21min - 297 - RAF Form 414, Vol 14
It’s logbook time again and you may recall that I was as freshly a minted A1 QFI as there could be and I had just left the training world to return to the front line on my old Squadron, the Fighting Cocks. I had been in Wales for
over 4 years and in that time the faces I knew on 43 Sqn had almost all gone... it was like I was joining a unit of strangers.
The Q Shed
Additional armed aircraft ready to go onto QRA
The F4 tank limiting speeds
A Soviet Badger trying to sneak past at low level
An F4 tanking from a converted Victor V Bomber
Decimomannu Air Base
How the ACMI Air Combat Manoeuvering Instrumentation worked
The Men of Harlech near Llanbedr
The Jindavik target drone
A frame from the Jindavik cameras showing a Sidewinder about to impact the towed flare target
My new navigator, Coolhand
A 43(F) Sqn Phantom
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the RAF, the USAF, RuthAS and Mike Freer.Sun, 06 Mar 2022 - 20min - 296 - Friedrich Karl von Koenig-Warthausen and the Crazy Baron!
It was a grand sight to see another German aircraft there, a Junkers W33 with its distinctive corrugated metal skin and stylish enclosed cockpit, a far cry from his own flimsy machine. The German pilots greeted each other and marvelled at how, in 1928, they should have met in such a remote place… some 3,300 miles, 5,300 km, from the Fatherland. It is doubtful that the Junkers pilot knew much about the young 22 year old airman with his flimsy little aircraft, but the gaunt and weathered Baron was well known to von Koenig-Warthausen!
The Junkers W33
Ehrenfried Günther Freiherr von Hünefeld
Alcock and Brown preparing for their transatlantic flight
Posing in front of the W33 named Bremen
The Bremen damaged but safely across the Atlantic
The flimsy, lightweight Klemm L20B
The Klemm airborne
Baron Freidrich Carl von König-Warthausen
The Baron renamed his aircraft after his countryman Hünefeld
Images under a Creative Commons licence with thanks to Monika Hoerath, Tomas Mellies, MIKAN, The Bundesarchiv, Edward N. Jackson, L'Aéronautique magazine, John Underwood plus images in the Public Domain.Mon, 21 Feb 2022 - 20min - 295 - The Life Saving Bombers
Instead of a cargo of bored business men and excited holiday makers, this aged DC-10 was carrying 12,000 gallons, thats 45,000 ltrs of bright red liquid in a huge tank attached to the centre of the fuselage. This is the story of the fire fighting water bombers.
A vast DC10 converted to flying tanker operations
A forest fire
Mixing fire retardant
A fire lookout
The Morton Lake hotshots
The dangers of a wildfire are considerable, even during an evacuation
The dangers of manoeuvring a big aircraft at low level are considerable
Other aircraft are converted into water bombers like this PBY-6A Catalina
Helicopters deliver water from buckets
One of the few purpose built water bombers, the Canadair Superscooper
The magnificent Mars water bomber
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the USAF, John McColgan, signal mirror, DarrenRD, Tim Peterson, the USN, SSgt Ed Drew, Pierre Bona and Alex Juorio.Tue, 15 Feb 2022 - 19min - 294 - Rhumbas and Quarrels
On the last tale, Sidewinders and Sparrows we talked a little about the history of rockets and missiles but it’s a big subject so this week I thought I’d expand on the theme a little and as I'm going to mention lots of rattlesnakes and sparrows, I should probably use the correct collective nouns… rhumbas and quarrels!
Rules of Engagement
JTIDS
The result of a Blue on Blue engagement
An AIM 54 Phoenix launch
An AIM7 Sparrow in flight
The APG63 radar
Radar discrimination
AIM7 Sparrow missiles on an F15 Eagle
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the USAF, USN, Daderot and the DOD Media.Wed, 26 Jan 2022 - 17min - 293 - Sidewinders and Sparrows
Despite their obvious differences, Sidewinders and Sparrows often went together because they aren’t just the names of flying creatures and slithering serpents… they are weapons of war.
The Sidewinder
House Sparrows
The Rapier missile system
Chinese Fire Arrows
The Tipu Sultan's artillery rockets
The RS-28 rockets fired by the Polikarpov I-16
The German R4M unguided air to air rocket
The nuclear AIR-2 Genie missile
A Genie launch
The AIM9 Sidewinder
The rotating reticule
The rolleron
Guidance
The warhead
An AIM 9 warhead effect demonstration
The AIM7 Sparrow
A QF4B killed by a Sparrow missile
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to images in the Public Domain, UK Defence Imagery, Wubei Zhi, NASA, Juergen Schiffmann, the USAF, David Monniaux, RoyKabanlit, U.S. Navy National Museum of Naval Aviation and the USN.
Tue, 18 Jan 2022 - 19min - 292 - Flight 574 and the Banning of Indonesia
It was New Year’s Day, 2007 and the 96 passengers booked on Adam Air Flight 574 from Java to Sulawesi boarded their Boeing 737-4Q8 for their 2 hour trip. The Indonesian government had adopted a policy of deregulation in the country’s aviation industry which had resulted in a boom of start-up airlines, many of which were low cost carriers. This decision wasn’t matched with an equivalent ramp up of government supervision and control… the result was fierce commercial competition amongst the new airlines with little or no oversight.
Competition amongst the many start up low cost airlines was fierce.
The incident Adam Air Boeing 737, ready for boarding.
An Adam Air B737 taxies out.
Debris from the flight is washed up.
The USN ship Mary Sears.
Adam Air flight 172.
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to FLasset for logo, marlborotosca, Dmitriy Pichugin. the NTSB, the USN, the NTSC and ERRORHUNT.Thu, 06 Jan 2022 - 19min - 291 - RAF Form 414, Volume 13
Another installment of tales from my RAF logbook. I’m about halfway through my 4 year sentence at RAF Valley instructing those RAF pilots destined for the fast jet world. The first couple of years had been far from without incident and I should probably mention that I nearly lost my greatest friend to an accident but someone was watching over him that day and he survived.
Our great friend, Glen, a USAF exchange pilot.
Flying in the Hawk
The laying on of hands by Central Flying School
The Hawk T1 trainer
The horrible Spinning explanation
The laziest A1 QFI in existenceThu, 30 Dec 2021 - 19min - 290 - How it Starts
How do you get a pilot going? Well, in the old days it started with a hand crank!
The Hucks Starter
... Cowboy Land!
The Coffman Starter
A cartridge starter on the RB-57A
The DHC1 Chipmunk
The Arnold Benz Velo
The cycle of a jet engine
RN Seahawks simultaneous use of their cartridge starters
RAF Lightnings of No56 "Chicken in the Basket" Sqn at RAF Akrotiri
The SR71 Blackbird
The Riedelanlasser starter for German BMW 003 and Jumo 004 turbojet engines
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the Library of Congress, Jeff Dahl, NACA, US Patent Office, bomberpilot, Jeff Dahl, the IMW, the RAF, the USAF and Kogo. Attribution not possible for some images.Tue, 21 Dec 2021 - 16min - 289 - 500 Show PT
And so Plane Tales was born with the story of the mixologist Joe Gilmore… well, kind of. There had been a few bits in the Show pre the Farnborough special but it hadn’t become part of APG like it is now. The number of Tales will never catch Jeff’s impressive half millennium but they have now passed the 300 mark and these are a few of the memorable ones.
The mixologist, Joe Gilmore
Tumble Down Dick
The flight under Tower Bridge
Parliament
Capt Ogg ditching the Sovereign of the Skies.
Bob Hoover
Major Bung Lee lands his Bird Dog on the USS Midway
Capt Andy Anderson
Hillel
Voiceover artist Greg Willits at GregWillets.com
A tribute to the crew of Lady be Good
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks given on the original episode, Thomas Rowlandson, Greg Willits and DaniKauf, the USAF, the USN and those in the Public Domain.Fri, 03 Dec 2021 - 18min - 288 - Flying Over Christmas
Waiting for the arrival of the December flying roster was always a tense time. Those with big family gatherings are anxious to ensure they are at home with their loved ones whilst the more carefree crew, with fewer ties, might want to be down route somewhere exotic knowing that a bevy of party goers would be flying with them. I know of one crew who flew over Christmas with great excitement… at least I believe so! Their names were Frank Borman, James Lovell and William Anders, the crew of the Apollo 8 space mission.
Saturnalia
Victorian Christmas
Father Christmas
The Apollo 8 Crew
The Zond 5 spacecraft
The emblem and launch of Apollo 8
Stage 3 jettison
The surface of the moon
Earthrise
A safe return
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Antoine-François Callet, Joseph Lionel Williams, Robert Seymour, Josiah King, Alfred Henry Forrester, the USSR Post and NASA.Thu, 16 Dec 2021 - 20min - 287 - The Five Hundredth
In the United States the Coast Guard is a fully paid up branch of the military. Its men and women have served with valour in many conflicts and I’m going to tell you about one such event, the rescue of Misty 11.
The badge of the US Coast Guard
An F100 Fast FAC Misty crew
An OV10 Bronco
Spads escorting a Jolly Green Giant
The jungle penetrator.
Landing in difficult terrain
500 saves
The approach into the valley
The rescue
Technical Sergeant Donald G. Smith
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the USAF National Museum, the USAF, USAF National Museum, USGOV-PD, Digital Public Library of America, Defence Imagery, the US Coast Guard and US Gov.Wed, 24 Nov 2021 - 18min - 286 - RAF Form 414, Vol 12
Year two of Porridge… that’s an old term used by prisoners to describe their time inside jail but was very apt as many of my fellow flying instructors and I had not volunteered for this particular job and it was a long one. As I leaf through the pages of my log book I recall memories from my flying career.
Flying with the Air Officer Commanding
The badge of No 4 Flying Training School, palm tree and all!
Lining up for breaks to the right when someone decided to go LEFT instead!
The fabled MON formation
How the English might have read it!
10 Hawks in echelon
Fishing!
The F4 FIRE Drill
If FIRE confirmed - EJECT
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the RAF, BAe, MOD and Mr Geoff Lee of Plane Focus.Fri, 19 Nov 2021 - 19min - 285 - Operation Tarnegol
Suddenly the black of the night that surrounded them was split open by bright tracer cannon fire that streaked by the windows with loud cracks and then came the shock and thud as some struck the aircraft. The lights were all extinguished… so in the dark, tense and alarmed, everyone waited to see what would happen next. It was the 24th of October 1956, and the first shots in a war over the Suez Canal had just been fired!
Ferdinand de Lesseps, the Father of the Suez Canal
The opening of the canal
A collection of canal views
British armed forces went great lengths to protect the canal during 2 World Wars
After a military coup in Egypt, Nasser took control of the country and seized the Suez Canal
The NF13 Meteor sold to the IAF by Britain
An Il14, as used by the Egyption Air Force
The actual Gloster Meteor used in the attack
The Ilyushin is brought down killing all onboard
The invasion by British, French and Israeli forces is a complete success but political pressures force them to relinquish the canal
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Mohamed kamal 1984, NADAR, the Tropenmuseum, the IWM, the RAF, the MOD, Lars Söderström and other images in the Public Domain.Thu, 11 Nov 2021 - 22min - 284 - How the Poppy Grew
About this time of the year, I like to do a tale that turns our minds to those who gave their lives for their countries in the many conflicts that have plagued the world. In the past in tales such as, “In Flanders Fields and Lest We Forget” I’ve talked about the poppy, used as a symbol of remembrance in many countries, and the poem penned by the Canadian doctor, Lt Col John McCrae. There was a gap in my story, however, that I would now like to close. The gap that transformed the sad words of John McCrae’s poem into the adoption of the poppy as a representation of remembrance for the fallen, amongst such a large part of the English speaking world… and beyond.
Lt Col John McCrae
The Escadrille Lafayette in July 1917
Moina Belle Michael
Desk and poppy
The YWCA
In Flanders Fields written by John McCrae
An original remembrance poppy
The Poppy Factory in London
Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance in the Albert Hall
The Poppy Lady's historic road marker
Images under Creative Commons licence under Public Domain and with thanks to the National Museum of the Air Force, the Poppy Project, Neysa McMein, Heatherannej, Nickeaglesfield, the MOD and Ember390.Wed, 03 Nov 2021 - 19min - 283 - Speedlight Bravo
Within a few days of detonating their first nuclear bomb, to the dismay of the Soviets, President Truman announced that they had the evidence to prove that within recent weeks an atomic explosion had occurred in the USSR. How the United States had obtained that knowledge was highly classified but we now know the story of the secret snoopers who sniffed the stratosphere and their spooky sorties!
The Castle Bravo test blast
The Tsar Bomba
American concerns over nuclear fallout
The WB-29
The RB-47H at the National Museum of the United States Air Force
Balloon debris
The RC-135
The long thin island of Novaya Zemlay
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to TravelingOtter, the US Department of Energy, Croquant, U.S. National Archives and Records Administration, Ruth AS, the USAF, the University of Texas, the SDASM Archives and NASA.Fri, 29 Oct 2021 - 18min - 282 - The Mike Wildeman Story – Part 3
This is the concluding part of my interview with Mike Wildman, an amputee pilot who has had a fascinating career in aviation. The first part covered Mike’s life in the Royal Air Force flying, the second concerned his life changing decision to have part of his left leg removed and his fight to lead the world’s first disabled formation display team. In this final section Mike tells us about creating Team Phoenix Air and flying the stunning Yak 50.
Mike leading the Bader Bus Company team
The Ultimate High Flying Experience
The interview with Mike, filmed by Nevil Bounds
Team Phoenix Air formation display
Sherill from Team Phoenix
The Yaks
The Yaks
The proposed 2022 air show highlights
The Yakovlevs in the air
The home of the Yakovlevs
How to get in touch with Mike Wildman
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Mike Wildman, Nevil Bounds, The Bader Bus Company, Ultimate High, Team Phoenix Air and the Yakovlevs.Fri, 22 Oct 2021 - 17min - 281 - The Mike Wildeman Story – Part 2
This is the second part of my interview with Mike Wildman, an amputee pilot who has had a fascinating career in aviation. The first part covered Mike’s life in the Royal Air Force flying, amongst other aircraft, the C130 Hercules. In this part we hear about his life changing decision to have part of his left leg removed and his fight, not only to get back into the cockpit of an aircraft but to lead the world’s first disabled formation display team.
Recording the interview with Mike in front of a Yak 52
Mike, a Captain with Virgin Atlantic Airways
Mike after his life changing decision to have part of his left leg removed
Aerobility, the organisation that got Mike back into the air as an amputee pilot
Sir Douglas Bader, a double amputee WWII Battle of Britain fighter pilot
The pilots of the world's first amputee formation team
The Bader Bus Company Still Running formation team
Mike climbing out of his Yakovlevs Yak 52
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the RAF, Aerobility, the Yakovlevs, the Bader Bus Company and Mike Wildman.Fri, 15 Oct 2021 - 18min - 280 - The Mike Wildeman Story – Part 1
Mike Wildman is an amputee pilot who has had a fascinating career in aviation. This tale is about his time in the Royal Air Force flying the C130 Hercules in some very challenging theatres. His story will both amaze and inspire, particularly in the later parts when we will cover his work as the leader of the world's only fully aerobatic amputee formation team... TeamPhoenixAir.com
Mike, learning to fly
Mike during his RAF basic flying training
Mike was posted to fly the C130 Hercules
Low flying over the desert
Mike, the captain of a Belgium Air Force C130 during his exchange tour
The EPTS Andover that Mike flew
The Boscome Down Comet 4 named Canopus that Mike flew to the North Pole
The day at RIAT when a Mig 29 crashed onto Mike's aircraft nearly killing him and the others who were watching the show from the top of the fuselage!
Contact details for Mike and Team Phoenix, the world's only disabled aerobatic formation team
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Mike Freer, RuthAS and the RAF.Thu, 07 Oct 2021 - 20min - 279 - Where it All Began
The Old Pilot ventures back to the little airport where his career in aviation began nearly half a century previously, meets the young lady now doing his old job and recalls some adventures from his early days.
Many thanks to Nev of Plane Talking UK for providing the audio visual equipment
Grace talks about Synergy Flight Training
The Old Pilot does his thing!
Thanks to those who cameTue, 28 Sep 2021 - 18min - 278 - The Millionaire’s Mob
White's is the oldest and most exclusive Gentleman’s club in London its members have included more Earls, Dukes, Lords, Barrons, Princes, Knights, Viscounts. Marquesses, heads of industry and notable politicians than you could shake a stick at. The name we’re interested in, though, is that of Lord Edward Grosvenor, the youngest son of the 1st Duke of Westminster. It was in White's that Grosvenor had the idea to form an RAF Squadron of wealthy aristocratic young aviators all of whom were already amateur pilots and members of the club... this is the story of that Squadron.
Hot Chocolate, the drink that started it all
Chocolate and Coffee Houses were known for anarchy, licentiousness, gambling, hobnobbing, and politicking.
White's, the oldest and most exclusive Gentleman’s club in London
The French Foreign Legion
The Gordon Bennett Balloon Race trophy
An officer and a gentleman
The Avro 504
No 601 Squadron the County of London
Swapping cockpits
Billy Fisk III driving the 1932 US Olympic bobsled team
The Hawker Hurricane
Canadian Sir John William Maxwell Aitken
The Millionaire's Hurricanes over England
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the Library of Congress, Afro Bighair, Anthony O'Neil, the National Archives, Deutsche Fotothek and the RAF.Tue, 07 Sep 2021 - 20min - 277 - The Sensory Pilot
The world of a pilot is different to any other. They see things from a different perspective and view the world from places that even the mightiest birds cannot reach. All their faculties of sight, smell, taste, touch and hearing experience sensations unique to their position whether they are manoeuvring a mighty airliner or sliding through the air on sheets of silk in a slippery sailplane. When they get a chance, even the most professional and conscientious pilots will take a moment to marvel at their world. These are treasured moments that they will lock in their hearts and only bring out in quiet moments of contemplation, perhaps when they look back and realise what a life of wonder they have led.
The gear
The brain
Cordite
Passengers
Switches
Gloves
Goon suit
Size
Saraha
Ice rivers
Ice bergs
Streets of cumuli
Skyscrapers
Noctilucent
Glory
Trails
Moon
Sunset
Steph
Rick
Atlantic
TouchdownThu, 02 Sep 2021 - 19min - 276 - Airtists
We all have our favourite flying movies, whether it’s a black and white classic with biplanes wheeling around the sky flown by actual World War One flying aces, comedy cult movies from which we can quote our favourite lines (Shirley you don’t mean that) or modern thrillers which employ state of the art computer generated imagery. This is a story of a much loved actor who didn't just act in an aircraft crash, he became an unwilling participant.
Favourite movies
Ancestor William Bradford
Army swimming training
Going AWOL, a black mark for the squad
The Douglas AD-1Q Skyraider
A ditched Skyraider
A single seat dingy
The coast off Point Reyes
The RCA station that took him in
Clint Eastwood
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Glasshouse, coolvalley, Impawards, MGM, the US Army, US Navy, the Produzioni Europee Associati and the NPS GOV.Sat, 28 Aug 2021 - 19min - 275 - The “Young Tiger” Tanker Boys
The work the Young Tiger crews performed during the Vietnam War was monumental. With an average fleet of 88 tankers over a 7 year period they performed nearly 180 thousand missions offloading 8.2 billion lbs, thats over 3,700 million tons, of fuel. A staggering achievement only surpassed by the hundreds of aircraft saves they achieved, preventing many of their fellow aircrew from falling into enemy hands.
The Lockheed L193 tanker proposal
A B52 of SAC refuelling from a Boeing KC135
The KC135 Flying Boom
The Flying Tigers in Vietnam
The F105
A KC135 refuelling F105s
Navy Whales
The Daisy Chain
An F111 tanking
The Flying Tigers at work
Images shown under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Lockheed, the USAF, NAID, the US Government and the US Navy.Thu, 19 Aug 2021 - 18min - 274 - Four Instructors Walk into a Bar, Part 2
Forty years ago, four RAF pilots graduated from Central Flying School and became fast jet Qualified Flying Instructors. They hadn't been together at the same time since then. When they did, they shared some more stories.
Four QFIs then
Dave
A typical course photo
How Dave's Hawk might have looked!
The Hawk canopy showing the lines of Miniature Detonating Cord MDC
Dave after receiving his Green Endorsement
Dave's Green Endorsement
Nij
An F4
Barry
An RAF Canberra
Four QFIs now
Images shown under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Airwolfhound, the RAF and JohnnyOneSpeed.Thu, 12 Aug 2021 - 18min - 273 - The Asoh Defence
Sadly there are also many who think that ‘Boy Scout’ honesty is something that should be left behind in childhood but luckily not many that do take on the responsibility of becoming a career pilot. When I discovered recently that there is a name for this capacity to openly admit guilt for one’s mistakes, it didn’t come as a surprise that it was named after a pilot. Captain Asoh.
Tokyo airport
A DC8 on approach
A JAL Captain's hat
The DC8 cockpit
The miraculous accidental landing of Shiga
The ditched JAL DC8, repaired and flying again for Okada Air
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to SAS, Felix Goetting, Werner Friedli and Pentti Koskinen.Fri, 06 Aug 2021 - 17min - 272 - Four Instructors Went Into a Bar
Forty years ago, four RAF pilots graduated from Central Flying School and became fast jet Qualified Flying Instructors. They hadn't been together at the same time since then. When they did, they shared a few stories.
Four QFIs back then
The Hawk in close formation
The English Electric Lightning
The Lightning F3
Loch Ness
Four QFIs now!
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Mike Freer, Bob Adams, RuthAS and the Director General of the Ordnance Survey.
Wed, 21 Jul 2021 - 19min - 271 - Defending the Baltic Express
Defenceless, it relied on its unmatched performance to provide vital data for the USA and NATO on some of the most sensitive parts of the globe. One of the regular missions flown by the SR71 Blackbird out of a base in the United Kingdom, RAF Mildenhall, was East across the North and Baltic Seas towards the territories of the Soviet Union; these flights were known as the Baltic Express. All went until one day...
The SR71 at Mildenhall
The original A12
The Baltic Express track
The Saab 29, nicknamed the Tunnan
The Draken
The Saab AJS 37 Viggen
The Vig was also capable of operating from unusual locations
Shockwave formation during an unstart.
An SR71 pilot in his pressure suit
The Mig 25 Foxbat
Three of the 4 Viggen pilots involved receive their Air Medals
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the Digital Public Library of America, USAF, John5199, Blockhaj, Alan Wilson, Guenter KONZ-BEYER Bad Erlach, NASA, Alex Beltyukov, Defence Imagery and the US Gov.Tue, 13 Jul 2021 - 19min - 270 - Check-in Confessions, Part Two
The crew come clean on some of their layover hotel experiences. After Part 1, the Good, comes Part 2, the Bad and the Ugly!
Capt Nick's hotel in Mong Kok, the epicentre of the SARS pandemic.
The New York hotel nicknamed the Transylvania!
The Kentucky Derby.
ACME B-727 Flight Engineer Jeff.
His room resembled a monk's cell.
Stouffers in its heyday.
Steph's famous A sign!
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Chong Fat, Maximilian Dörrbecker, Dr Fred Murphy, ArnoldReinhold, PandamicPhoto.com, Carol M. Highsmith, Zarateman and Oliver Pitzke.Mon, 05 Jul 2021 - 17min - 269 - Check-in Confessions, Part One
Over their careers, airline pilots, and doctors come to that, will have stayed in a myriad of loggings during their overnight stays and the vast majority will have merged into a conglomeration of memories but every now and then one or two will stand out from the rest. In this tale, the crew have kindly shared some of their experiences starting with the Good… the Bad and the Ugly will follow on next week so be sure to tune in!
Capt Nick landing in Hong Kong
The Langham Place hotel
The amazing vertical mall.
The original Tim Ho Wan dim sum resturant
The Bird Market
The C141
American Samoa
The Rainmaker Hotel
The Boeing 767
The Intercontinental Tahiti Resort
The Leeward Island of Montserrat
Olveston house
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the Langham Place hotel, the USAF, NOAA, Jerry & Roy Klotz MD, Intercontinental Hotels and Olveston house.Thu, 01 Jul 2021 - 18min - 268 - The Baby Killers
It was the 19th of January 1915 and the people of the English towns of Great Yarmouth and King’s Lynn were woken by an eerie throbbing sound from above them. No-one there had ever heard it before, this deep rumble of powerful engines in the sky, slowly approaching in the darkness. People left their homes and looked into the inky black sky but nothing could be seen. The noise grew and, now alarmed at this strange roaring, they began to run but nobody was sure which way would be safe… they didn’t know if they were running towards danger or away! Then the blackness was cracked wide open by a bright flash, soon followed by the thunder of an explosion as bombs dropped on the defenceless people below. The full horror of aerial warfare had been unleashed on the people of England and when the smoke cleared, the first deaths revealed.
The bombing of Kings Lynn and Great Yarmouth.
A British recruitment poster.
A commemorative wall plaque.
Newspaper headlines of the day.
The Buckingham bullet.
Lt Warneford's downing of the first Zeppelin by a fighter aircraft.
The L23 capturing the Norwegian bark, Royal.
Using Zeppelins in support of the German Navy was a primary mission and crashes became commonplace.
The world's first deck landing on an aircraft carrier, the converted Battlecruiser HMS Furious.
Sopwith Camels onboard HMS Furious prior to the Tondern raid.
The aftermath of the Tondern raid on the Toska hangar.
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to The Library of Congress, Christopher Braun, Geni, Crosby F Gordon, The War Illustrated, the Imperial War Museum, Marshall Everett, the Ministry of Defence and for images in the Public Domain.Tue, 22 Jun 2021 - 20min - 267 - Sweet Retirement
Lieutenant Colonel Rob Sweet, after a 33 year career flying the Warthog, completed his final flight on the 5th of June 2021 at Moody Air Force Base, Georgia. As he climbed out he was met with a shower of champagne. I don’t regret going over there, fighting and getting shot down, Sweet said, that’s what I took an oath to do. The Air Force Chief of Staff, General Charles Brown said, with your retirement, it will be the first time in the history of our Air Force that we will not have a former POW serving. Thank you for all you've done. This is the story of Rob Sweet.
The venerable Spad (the A-1 Skyraider).
General Electric GAU-8/A beside a Volkswagen Beetle!
A comparison of size between a .303 round and that of the GAU-8.
The smoke created by the GAU-8 could be a problem when ingested into the engines.
An Iraq Republican Guard armoured vehicle.
The SA-3 Strela.
Rockeye bomblets.
Lt Col Sweet is finally released.
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the USN, USAF, Samf4u, Defence Imagery, Department of National Defence, Vitaly V. Kuzminand and Johnny Saunderson.Wed, 16 Jun 2021 - 19min - 266 - RAF Form 414 Vol 11
Another foray into the log book as the Old Pilot starts work as a Qualified Flying Instructor at No 4 Flying Training School, RAF Valley.
Another course of newly minted QFIs
A Hawk T1 over RAF Valley on the island of Anglesey
Hawks in close formation
The Reds doing it properly in cloud and everything!
Flying solo in the Hawk
The Hawk doing aerobatics
The RAF Valley Summer Ball
Yours truly, B2 QFI
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the UK Ministry of Defence.Fri, 11 Jun 2021 - 18min - 265 - Flying all the Fours
Looking back on the final years of the second world war its easy to forget that nobody knew quite when the conflict would end. Many aircraft were constructed and flown and were thought to be the pinnacle of fighting science at the time but we know little of them nowadays because the war ended and they never made it into service… they were no longer required. Here are a few.
The Supermarine Spitfire
The Republic Rainbow
The Martin Baker MB3
The Martin Baker MB5
The CAC Boomerang
The CA 15 Kangaroo
The HO 229
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the RAF, SDASM, USAF, Insomnia Cured Here, RAF, Martin Baker, IWM, Australian War Memorial collection John Thomas Harrison, US Army, Tomás Del Coro and the NASM.Tue, 01 Jun 2021 - 19min - 264 - Coca Able Peter Tokio, Nan Item Canada King… Revisited!
A favourite old tale of the checkered history that brought about the Phonetic Alphabet and Op Brevity Code... retold.
A early radio
Send three and fourpence!
An early Army signals book
N for November
The NATO Phonetic Alphabet
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the US Army, an Unknown cartoonist, US Mint, Matthäus Mérian, Daiju Azuma, Screenland, Elmer Eustice Bucher, Generali, Master of Jean Rolin II, Mcj1800 and the Auckland Museum.Thu, 27 May 2021 - 15min - 263 - Mutiny
Air Law is something that all pilots must have some knowledge of or they wouldn’t be awarded a licence or certificate… it’s required knowledge. Having said that, it's a long way from being simple and even a qualified Air Transport pilot will only have scratched the surface. In the Air Force, one might have assumed that things would have been pretty tight and mutiny unheard of.
Let me set you straight!
Early balloons
An aircraft Commander
The Signals Corps in a balloon basket
The Freeman Field mutiny
Lt Bill Terry
The RAF in Karachi
The RAF mutiny
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Library of Congress, US Army,the RAF and the RAF Museum.Thu, 20 May 2021 - 18min - 262 - Leaving Them Behind
The Vulcan bomber only had ejector seats for the two pilots... the rear crew made do with an escape slide, a level if inequality that killed many and resulted in questions being asked in Parliament. This is the story of the Vulcan and a look at the USN Skyknight which had a similar escape system.
The rear crew compartment of the Avro Vulcan
Malta
Malta
The Vulcan
The Vulcan air brakes
The crash site
Avro Vulcan XV770
The Vulcan rear crew escape hatch
The F3 Skynight
Skynight bailout trials
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Isaac Bee, Anton Zelenov, NASA, DFST, RuthAS, the RAF, Roland Turner, US Navy, Ultra7 and the USAF.Sun, 16 May 2021 - 20min - 261 - Jet Noise, The Sound Of…
The noise of flying machines can be a source of joy or annoyance. Let's have a look at what makes that noise and how much progress has been made over the years!
The F-84F Thunderbirds team
The XF-84H 'Thunderscreech'!
The Boeing Dash 80, prototype of the B707
Noise creating vortices coming from an airliner's flaps
The Bypass section of a RR Trent
A possible Airbus blended body design
An APU exhaust
The Gyrodyne Rotorcycle
Images are displayed under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Dreamstime.com - Airbus, the USAF, Boeing Dreamscape, David Monniaux and the US DOD.Sat, 08 May 2021 - 20min - 260 - The K to R of Aviation
After last week’s tale, here are a few more letters of the Alphabet to ponder on!
The Martin Baker Mk7A seat with adjustable rocket pack!
The US Army working under flares
Aircraft registrations
Working on the RR Merlin engine
The aircraft convenience!
Varig Flight 820
The Queen's Flight
Rolls Royce
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Martin Baker, US Army, Richard Stone, David, Sapeurs Pompiers de Paris and the MOD.Mon, 19 Apr 2021 - 19min - 259 - The S to Z of Aviation
The final few letters of a look at aviation through the alphabet.
A model of the original Flettner 282 Helicopter
Flettner helicopters have the unfortunate potential to decapitate the unwary!
A cutaway of the Spitfire with it's remarkable Rolls Royce Merlin V12 engine.
The Allison V-1710 V12 engine
The Daimler-Benz DB600 V12.
The X Planes
The Napkin ring
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Raobe001, Ball wallpaper, the National Archives UK, the Smithsonian archive, the USAF, NASA,Thu, 29 Apr 2021 - 19min - 258 - The A to J of Aviation
The language of aviation is treasured by those of us who use it, especially since it separates us from those poor earth bound souls who don’t spend their lives with their eyes cast skyward. In the spirit of fairness, particularly to spouses who stand impatiently, eyes rolling as we converse with our avgeek friends about how pretty that Wedgetail is, here are a few pointers to help you join in the conversation.
The axes of an aircraft
Flight Bag
Drag!
An Empennage
Flaps
A Chinese Follow-Me car
A world record hail stone
Hi is for Hangar
The angle of incidence
The F8 "Last of the Gunfighters'.
The Jetway!
Images under the Creative Commons licence with thanks to M9matr0902, ZeroOne, Comicship, Olivier Cleynen, NiD29, NOAA and Wallsworth.Mon, 12 Apr 2021 - 20min - 257 - RAF Form 414, Vol 10
I apologise to you all but it’s time for my tatty old RAF log book to come out of the cupboard again. It was a sad, sad situation but for the recently promoted Flight Lieutenant Anderson, his departure from flying the Phantom on 43 Squadron was a reality that he had to face up to. Central Flying School is an august establishment that will proudly inform anyone with an interest (or not) that it is the world’s longest existing flying training school. It was to this anachronistic institution that I was bound!
The crest of the Central Flying School of the Royal Air Force
The Staff of the Central Flying School
The Red Arrows
The island of Anglesey
The Britannia Bridge
The BAE Systems Hawk T1
Flying the Hawk
The Great Orme and Llandudno Pier
Llandudno Pier
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to CFS, the RAF, the National Library of Wales, Tim Felce, Defence Imagery, Google Maps, Noel Walley and images within the Public Domain.Sun, 04 Apr 2021 - 18min - 256 - Aprelya Odin
The subject of UFOs became a very popular theme in the press, on the television and in film, something that Intelligence services quietly encouraged. There were many, very secret projects that the US Government was investing enormous resources in, and any alternative explanation was preferable than the truth. One such project was the Silver Bug, a US Black version of the Canadian Avrocar. However, the Silver Bug's true capabilities were about to be discovered! But beware... not everything may be as it seems!
Sightings given credibility by the Swedish Air Intelligence Service
Everyone was caught up in the new UFO phenomena
Henri Coanda, discoverer of the Coanda effect
Jack Frost of Avro, the designer of the Avrocar
USAF regulations relating to UFOBs
The Canadian Avrocar during tests
Groom lake in Area 51
Technical Report on the Silver Bug
The Silver Bug's special Jet Stream aerodynamics
The Silver Surfer
The Silver Surfer accelerates
The Silver Surfer crosses the coast
The Silver Surfer completes its secret flight around the planet
The Soviet Aпреля Один (Aprelya Odin)
Images under Creative Commons Licence with thanks to the USAF, Bzuk, National Archives UK, Instituto Geográfico, Invencion propia, Doc Searles, William Bill Zuk, Phylyp and the USGov.Thu, 01 Apr 2021 - 20min - 255 - Terminal Velocity
It takes about 12 seconds for the human body to reach terminal velocity. At that speed they will see the earth’s surface approach them at 177 feet or 54 meters every second. These are the stories of a few survivors who have fallen from an aircraft, without opening a parachute... and survived!
The remarkable Juliane Koepcke
Nicholas Alkemade
RAF Lancasters
The Ju88 nightfighter
The Il-4
B17 Flying Fortress bombers on a mission over Europe
The B17 ball turret
Vesna Vulović and a JAT DC9
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the RAF, SDASM, IWM and clipperarctic. Other images are in the Public Domain or considered Fair Use.Thu, 25 Mar 2021 - 19min - 254 - The Kupang Kid
The landing gear, or undercarriage, of a big airliner is a massive and powerful system. In modern times stowaways, have frequently attempted to hide within the undercarriage wheel-wells of airliners. The chances of surviving such an ordeal are remote in the extreme as the hazards are many. If someone attempting such a dangerous journey isn’t crushed by the movement of the gear as it stows or fall to their death when the undercarriage doors open to raise or lower the gear, then the environment will present an almost insurmountable hazard. Some, however, still survive!
The landing gear of a B747
The forces that the undercarriage assembly is subjected to are considerable
The landing gear assembly and doors of a B747
FAA guidance on times of useful consciousness
Stranded near Newfoundland in the ice
A Douglas DC8
The DC10
Japanese troops in Timor
A 1950's airport similar to Kupang
A Netherlands Air Force C47
Darwin Hospital
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Adrian Pingstone, Faisal Akram, Alf van Beem, Australian War Memorial, Fotoafdrukken Koninklijke Luchtmacht and kenhodge13.Fri, 19 Mar 2021 - 18min - 253 - The Hover Cushion Glide Air Vehicle Thing
The Hovercraft is something of a rare beast. This story examines the many engineers and scientists who contributed to the development of a vehicle that is lifted on a cushion of air and is capable of travelling over land, water, mud, ice, tarmac, sand and many other flattish surfaces.
The Swedish scientist Emanuel Swedenborg is known to have sketched the first hovercraft design in 1714.
Dagobert Müller von Thomamühl's Luftkissengleitboot, a surface effect boat.
How a hovercraft functions.
Ford's efforts at hovering cars.
The L1 hovering tank.
Charles Fletcher’s Glidemobile.
Cockerell's hovercraft patent.
Sir Christopher Sydney Cockerell.
SRN1.
SRN4.
The US Navy LCAC.
The Soviet Zubr class ACV, the biggest in the world weighing in at 555 tons.
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to those in the Public Domain, Technical Museum Vienna, Messer Woland, the Ford Motor Company, Ad Meskens, GB Patent Office, The National Archives UK, USN, Andrew Berridge and Mil.Ru (LightZone).
Fri, 12 Mar 2021 - 20min - 252 - The Horsehead Gang
Out of the gloom of thick cloud, through their windscreens, the pilots suddenly saw the tops of pine trees but it was too late to pull up. They ploughed through them as the branches smashed into the left wing shattering the navigation light. One of the passengers onboard was the President of the airline, Captain Eddie Rickenbacker... this is his story.
An Eastern Airlines DC3
Atlanta had poor weather and it was close to midnight when the aircraft crashed
Eddie Rickenbacker
The findings of the inquiry
Racing in San Francisco
Rickenbacker becomes CO of the 94th, the Hat in the Ring gang
After receiving many decorations, Rickenbacker returns to the US a hero
The Rickenbacker motor company
Rickenbacker survives a second crash, this time in a Boeing B-17
Capt. E.V. "Eddie" Rickenbacker wearing the Congressional Medal of Honor
Images published under Creative Commons Licence with thanks to Jack Delano, the Library of Congress, CAB, SF Public Library, NARA, Rickenbacker Motors, the USAFand the USAAF.Thu, 04 Mar 2021 - 19min - 251 - Flying the Red Flag, Part III
This is the final part of the Red Flag tales which carries on directly from Part II where we heard some exploits from participants of Exercise Red Flag. If you haven't listened to the previous taleson this subject, it would be worth going back them. My thanks to Jaguar Pilot Nij, Tornado pilot Gasher, Tomcat RIO Scott and RAAF F111 Nav Abs.
The E-3 Sentry AWACS.
Break Right Chuck, there's one in your 6 o'clock!
A Smokey SAM.
Live weapons being dropped during Red Flag.
A Tornado drops flares.
An RAAF F111 puts its wings back and goes!
The Jaguar pilot's favourite dance.
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the USAF, Photo-Concepte.de, the RAF, the USN,Sat, 20 Feb 2021 - 20min - 250 - RAF Form 414, Vol. 9
It is the beginning of 1981 but for me it was the conclusion of my first front line tour of duty. When my posting came I was devastated. I had been sent to instruct at No 4 Flying Training School, RAF Valley on the island of Anglesey in North Wales. A remote corner in the middle of nowhere doing a job I didn’t want.
An F4 Phantom FG1 of No43(F) Sqn.
The Hawker Harrier GR1.
Survival Scramble.
The A10 Warthog.
The BLC Malfunction emergency checklist.
Greek Gunboats!
My posting to become a QFI loomed!
My much loved Yamaha along with our poo coloured Rover!
Climbing Mt Snowdon.
Dave would perish during Exercise Red Flag when he crashed his RAF Jaguar avoiding a simulated SAM engagement.
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Mike Freer, Senior Airman Matthew Bruch, CC BY-SA 3.0, the USAF, the RAF and myself!Sun, 31 Jan 2021 - 20min - 249 - Flying the Red Flag, Part II
In the first part of the Red Flag tales we talked about the reasons for the formation of the USAF Fighter Weapons School and the subsequent creation of Exercise Red Flag. Now we get a chance to hear from some of the participants. Firstly there is Nij who took time off from his Nuclear QRA duties to fly his RAF Jaguar in Flag exercises. Then we have a Tornado GR1 pilot, Gasher, who also participated on behalf of the RAF. Jack was an F15 pilot who took part as a wingman, formation leader and also as a Fighter Weapons School graduate. Scott was a Tomcat RIO who was part of Red Air during Flag exercises and Abs, a navigator from the Royal Australian Air Force flew with the F111 force and was even a Blue Force Commander during the exercise.
An RAF Jaguar
An RAF Tornado at Nellis
The mighty F15 Eagle
The USN F14 Tomcat
The RAAF F111
The Nellis ranges with Area 51 marked in red
The Nellis Air Force Base
A Red Flag briefing
The symbol of Exercise Red Flag
The EF-111A Raven
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Steve Lynes, Finlay McWalter, the USAF, USN, Ken Lund, the National Museum of the Air Force and the MOD.Sat, 13 Feb 2021 - 19min - 248 - Flying the Red Flag
The Korean War had been a successful period for the US Air Force but a decade later in the Vietnam war their success rate had gone from 10:1 down to 1:1. Something had to be be done. This is the story of the creation of the USAF Fighter Weapons School and Exercise Red Flag!
The F86 in Korea
The F4 Phantom II
Wreckage of a B52 in Hanoi
The Weapons School graduate patch and an example of dissimilar combat between an F16 and Mig21
A Soviet Surface to Air missile system
A captured Soviet Mig in USAF markings
The F5 Aggressors
Richard Suter
The Nellis Ranges
A 'Smokey SAM'
IAF F15s, one of the many nations that are invited to take part in Ex Red Flag
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the USAF, Mark Limb, US DOD, US Gov, US Defence Imagery, USMC, Finlay McWalter, National Museum of the Air Force and Srđan Popović.Sat, 06 Feb 2021 - 18min - 247 - The Deutschendorfs
The Sound Barrier was first broken in 1947... by 1949 Convair had submitted its initial bid for the USAF's first supersonic bomber. So much had to be learned in that time… the aerodynamics of supersonic flight, the construction materials that would be required and the engines that could power it were only part of the technological challenges that would be faced. It was truly a remarkable effort. The pilots that were chosen to fly this tricky Mach 2, 70,000 ft capable aircraft that could climb at over 45,000ft a minute, were highly skilled and Lt Col Henry, John Deutschendorf was one of them.
The opposing sides of the Cold War
The first generation of US and Soviet ICBM nuclear missiles
The B-58 Hustler
The Hustler's escape pod
The three B-58 cockpit hatches
John Denver
The Long EZ
Ghostbusters II
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Kingkingphoto, the USAF, NOAA and Impawards.Sat, 23 Jan 2021 - 19min - 246 - Whether the Weather
Whether the weather be cold,
Or whether the weather be hot,
We'll weather the weather,
Whatever the weather,
Whether we like it or not!
Nowadays, however, we are blessed with more ways to get the weather than one can shake proverbial sticks at and, certainly in the world of aviation, it's all remarkably accurate even if it’s presented in a rather archaic code. Of course even that is pretty advanced when compared with the early days!
Hippocrates
Galileo's thermometer
Early weather forecasting equipment!
The wrecking of the Royal Charter on the Island of Anglesey
Robert Firzroy, the father of met forecasting.
Gp Capt Stagg who forecasted the weather for Operation Chastise
The US Bureau of Metrology
An early radiosonde met balloon
A decode aid for aviation forecasts
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson, NOAA, Fenners and the RAF.Mon, 11 Jan 2021 - 19min - 245 - 101 Seconds
The pride of the Air India fleet, their first Boeing 747 was named after the Emperor Ashoka. The first of the Maharaja-themed aircraft it epitomised luxury and was, “Your palace in the sky.” On this New Year's day, however, its flight would last only a few seconds.
The Emperor Ashoka Boeing 747
The cockpit
The Engineer's station.
The interior of a Maharaja-themed Air India aircraft
The famous Jharokha styled windows
Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Air India PR, Oliver Cleynen, Snowdog, Mitchel Gilliand, Shahram Sharifi, Dharma and Searchtrail67.Sat, 09 Jan 2021 - 20min - 244 - A Christmas Story
'Twas the night after Christmas, when all through the house,
Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse...
All images produced by Nick Anderson PhotographicSat, 26 Dec 2020 - 6min - 243 - RAF Form 414 Volume 8
It’s starting to look its age, it’s frayed at the edges, wrinkled and has bits that might fall off. No, not me, my first venerable old Royal Air Force logbook. So before it comes apart completely, I think it might be time to punish you again with a few more stories from its pages.
The Westinghouse AWG 11/12 radar.
43 Sqn F4 Phantom FG1 on QRA.
Engaging a USAF EC130.
Engaging a USAF EC130.
My treasured Blue Peter badge.
The Boy Pilot, John, Ballex and Budgie... heroes of the Blue Peter Special!
The AEW Avro Shackleton.
Another Bear.
The F5 Aggressors in their distinctive Soviet camouflage.
You can't meander around a Leander! An RN Frigate.
Hunting Jags over the wilds of Scotland.
The RAF Piddle Pack!
An RAF goon suit (aircrew Immersion Suit).
Images under Creative Commons Licence with thanks to Daderot National Electronics Museum, the Royal Air Force, UK Crown, Mike Freer of Touchdown Aviation, USAF and the US Gov.Sat, 19 Dec 2020 - 19min
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