Airplane porn.

147,813 Views | 716 Replies | Last: 21 days ago by tk for tu juan
jkag89
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Space Shuttle Enterprise on top of a Boeing 747 "the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft" while a Concorde is taking off, Dulles International Airport 1986.
wbt5845
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RC_57
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wbt5845 said:


Damn allergies...
TequilaMockingbird
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nm
Eliminatus
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Aggie12B said:

Goose said:


When you are in serious contact with the enemy and this baby comes in on a CAS run, it is the most beautiful sight you could possibly imagine


Can confirm.

Three times actually.

As a former grunt, I'll fist fight anyone who badmouths CAS pilots in front of me.
GAC06
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I'll buy you a drink some time
Ag In Ok
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They are gunfighters - of a high order.

The stories of CAS are always engaging to me - the ones who jump into the fight every time. To the ones who disregarded attempts to be waived off by others, who put the dot on the enemy and pulled the trigger, to the pilots who focused on flying while rounds passed in and out of their cockpit, choppa gunners and crew who rained brass from whatever they had including small arms through a window, and to those who fought all the way to calling mayday. Though they always have the ability to exit in their very grasp, yet they stayed and fought. They didn't hesitate, they arrived, and delivered all the hell could for those on the ground who didn't have any way out.
Chilling.
Pooh Ah
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Pooh Ah
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Boom
ABATTBQ11
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That is one helluva shot
Eliminatus
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GAC06 said:

I'll buy you a drink some time


Likewise!
RC_57
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Pooh Ah said:



Spit?
Pooh Ah
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Vought F4U Corsair
falcon09
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Pooh Ah said:

Vought F4U Corsair


I think RC-57 is correct. No bend in the wings, top of the engine cowling is flattened out and the rudder extends below the horizontal stab.
RC_57
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Yep, must be the Spitfire

Plus looking again, note the exhaust comimhg out of the cowl. In-line engine, not a radial.

All in all, nice pic. Thanks
metrag06
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Definitely a Spitfire - great pic too
wbt5845
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C-17A doing a tactical departure from PDX. I loved my time working the C-17 - huge giant loads compared to all other airplanes I've worked on. That hard climb is a ball buster.

ABATTBQ11
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It's the tactical landing that's really cool...

This isn't the greatest video, but it's got some great video of Operation Credible Sport where Lockheed strapped rockets onto a C-130 for ultra short takeoff and landing to land and extract the the Iranian embassy hostages in the 80's from a soccer stadium. Essentially there were rockets to slow the plane down once it touched down. Crazy thing is that it mostly worked. Retrofitted plane was destroyed in a pilot error accident just before the mission would have handed though.

AlaskanAg99
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I have an idea, hear me out...

aTm '99
wbt5845
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ABATTBQ11 said:

It's the tactical landing that's really cool...

This isn't the greatest video, but it's got some great video of Operation Credible Sport where Lockheed strapped rockets onto a C-130 for ultra short takeoff and landing to land and extract the the Iranian embassy hostages in the 80's from a soccer stadium. Essentially there were rockets to slow the plane down once it touched down. Crazy thing is that it mostly worked. Retrofitted plane was destroyed in a pilot error accident just before the mission would have handed though.


I worked the C-130J for a few years. Some of the guys who worked this JATO assisted landing/ take off variant were still there. The flight test footage is insane.
The Fife
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jkag89 said:

Space Shuttle Enterprise on top of a Boeing 747 "the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft" while a Concorde is taking off, Dulles International Airport 1986.

I saw it haul the space shuttle through San Antonio in summer 2009. That thing used every inch of runway before it finally got off the ground! Everybody at work had to come out and see because we all knew that was the last time it would ever travel through here. Very cool to watch, my potatophone pics didn't do it justice.

https://www.jbsa.mil/News/News/Article/463523/space-shuttle-visits-lackland/
CharlieBrown17
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Min runway for the 130 is only 500 feet shorter than the 17.

Fully loaded 130 Js are still 100k or so less than an empty 17.

If you want a lot of **** put somewhere it probably shouldn't be able to go, a 17 is your answer.


Also wouldn't call an accident during testing of a brand new rocket landing system destroyed due to pilot error.

Hey Nav
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The C-17 is a wonderful aircraft. Is the incident at Elemendorf in 2010 the only fatal crash?
jkag89
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I got to see the Enterprise and its 747 carrier fly into Ellington AFB from my Intermediate School in the late '70s.

I also got to board a Concorde that was at DFW dedication in late '73 or early '74. I still have a give away poster from the event somewhere in my attic.
jkag89
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I think I've already stated this on this thread somewhere, but one of the most impressive air show demonstrations I ever witnessed was by a C-17. Despite it large size it is quite nimble.
falcon09
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Hey Nav said:

The C-17 is a wonderful aircraft. Is the incident at Elemendorf in 2010 the only fatal crash?
The Elmo crash is the only haul loss incident. It was a very similar incident to the B-52 crash at Fairchild in the early 90's. I don't think any of the other accidents have resulted in a fatality.

The 17 is extremely redundant and the engineers did a marvelous overall. It's an absolute dream to fly, especially when you remember it has a dry weight of almost 300k lbs and max T/O and landing weights of 585k lbs.

CharlieBrown17
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Yeah Elmo is the only lost 17.

A little digging and you can find the accident investigation board report online even though it shouldn't be. Dude was flying outside of parameters and ignored warnings.

Very similar to the B-52 crash like 09 said and even more irresponsible imo because of the B-52 incident.
BQ2017
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"In other news, local F-104 Starfighter ruins everything"
BQ2017
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Also idk what it is but Soviet/Russian aircraft are extremely beautiful in their own way

ABATTBQ11
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CharlieBrown17 said:

Min runway for the 130 is only 500 feet shorter than the 17.

Fully loaded 130 Js are still 100k or so less than an empty 17.

If you want a lot of **** put somewhere it probably shouldn't be able to go, a 17 is your answer.


Also wouldn't call an accident during testing of a brand new rocket landing system destroyed due to pilot error.




The min runway for the C-17 is also almost twice as wide though, so you need just over 2x the area even though it's only 17% longer.

The C-17 didn't exist in the early 80's, so it wasn't an option. They also had to land in a stadium, so min takeoff and landing was at an absolute premium. C-130 would have been the choice regardless because every inch mattered.


Pilot fired the rockets too early before the wheels were down. The plane essentially stopped midair and dropped. They'd had several successful tests previously. Definitely his error. Understandably so, but still his error.
jkag89
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Accidental Sonic Boom at EAA Oshkosh 2021


Betty's Dream the B-25 mentioned in the video
CharlieBrown17
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ABATTBQ11 said:

CharlieBrown17 said:

Min runway for the 130 is only 500 feet shorter than the 17.

Fully loaded 130 Js are still 100k or so less than an empty 17.

If you want a lot of **** put somewhere it probably shouldn't be able to go, a 17 is your answer.


Also wouldn't call an accident during testing of a brand new rocket landing system destroyed due to pilot error.




The min runway for the C-17 is also almost twice as wide though, so you need just over 2x the area even though it's only 17% longer.

The C-17 didn't exist in the early 80's, so it wasn't an option. They also had to land in a stadium, so min takeoff and landing was at an absolute premium. C-130 would have been the choice regardless because every inch mattered.


Pilot fired the rockets too early before the wheels were down. The plane essentially stopped midair and dropped. They'd had several successful tests previously. Definitely his error. Understandably so, but still his error.


The last set of rockets was owned by the FE who lit them off before they were wheels down during the mishap.

I guess I'll just fundamentally disagree with trying to point out and assign fault to someone risking their life to test a system 30+ years later.

aTmAg
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CharlieBrown17 said:

ABATTBQ11 said:

CharlieBrown17 said:

Min runway for the 130 is only 500 feet shorter than the 17.

Fully loaded 130 Js are still 100k or so less than an empty 17.

If you want a lot of **** put somewhere it probably shouldn't be able to go, a 17 is your answer.


Also wouldn't call an accident during testing of a brand new rocket landing system destroyed due to pilot error.




The min runway for the C-17 is also almost twice as wide though, so you need just over 2x the area even though it's only 17% longer.

The C-17 didn't exist in the early 80's, so it wasn't an option. They also had to land in a stadium, so min takeoff and landing was at an absolute premium. C-130 would have been the choice regardless because every inch mattered.


Pilot fired the rockets too early before the wheels were down. The plane essentially stopped midair and dropped. They'd had several successful tests previously. Definitely his error. Understandably so, but still his error.


The last set of rockets was owned by the FE who lit them off before they were wheels down during the mishap.

I guess I'll just fundamentally disagree with trying to point out and assign fault to someone risking their life to test a system 30+ years later.
Seems to me that they should have wired the rockets to the weight on wheels sensor. So the pilot/FE flips a switch when they are about to land, and then the rockets fire automatically when there is weight on both aft wheels.
CharlieBrown17
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There was an automatic system that the Lockheed team was working on the calibration of during testing

But yeah, does seem like a WOW switch would've been useful
wbt5845
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aTmAg said:

CharlieBrown17 said:

ABATTBQ11 said:

CharlieBrown17 said:

Min runway for the 130 is only 500 feet shorter than the 17.

Fully loaded 130 Js are still 100k or so less than an empty 17.

If you want a lot of **** put somewhere it probably shouldn't be able to go, a 17 is your answer.


Also wouldn't call an accident during testing of a brand new rocket landing system destroyed due to pilot error.




The min runway for the C-17 is also almost twice as wide though, so you need just over 2x the area even though it's only 17% longer.

The C-17 didn't exist in the early 80's, so it wasn't an option. They also had to land in a stadium, so min takeoff and landing was at an absolute premium. C-130 would have been the choice regardless because every inch mattered.


Pilot fired the rockets too early before the wheels were down. The plane essentially stopped midair and dropped. They'd had several successful tests previously. Definitely his error. Understandably so, but still his error.


The last set of rockets was owned by the FE who lit them off before they were wheels down during the mishap.

I guess I'll just fundamentally disagree with trying to point out and assign fault to someone risking their life to test a system 30+ years later.
Seems to me that they should have wired the rockets to the weight on wheels sensor. So the pilot/FE flips a switch when they are about to land, and then the rockets fire automatically when there is weight on both aft wheels.
This was done in 1979 in just a few weeks of design, so the electronics were very primitive. Also, if memory serves me correct, the pilots really wanted to have control over when those rockets fired, cause you were LANDING when you flipped that switch.
 
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