Well, there was a string of gerbil deaths because they weren't leaving the cowlings open. DoD did an investigating and realized their mistake. They also realized that since a lot of T6's now needed an overhaul, it just made sense to upgrade to the hamsters.
This is my Dad's "Chit Patch" from WW2. It was used to identify downed Allied air crew to Chinese civilians, and asks for protection and return to friendly lines.
Being in TexAgs jail changes a man……..no, not really
Mriya flew into IAH a few years back - didn't even look like it was moving when it crossed 45 eastbound for landing. Friend that was a corporate pilot said that traffic was always jacked up when an Antonov came in because it had to sit at the end of the runway for several minutes prior to departure to get the engines fully revved up, and the runway used for landing/departure had to be closed immediately afterwards to clear oil spills and FOD that inevitably fell off.
This is my Dad's "Chit Patch" from WW2. It was used to identify downed Allied air crew to Chinese civilians, and asks for protection and return to friendly lines.
What'd your dad fly in again? My granddad was a B-24 radio operator who actually did have to bail out over China (I think it was mechanical failure). Entire crew was collected by the Chinese and repatriated.
Granddad (who I never met - died in a car wreck in the 50s) is second row, the super pale guy fourth from the left.
This is my Dad's "Chit Patch" from WW2. It was used to identify downed Allied air crew to Chinese civilians, and asks for protection and return to friendly lines.
What'd your dad fly in again? My granddad was a B-24 radio operator who actually did have to bail out over China (I think it was mechanical failure). Entire crew was collected by the Chinese and repatriated.
Granddad (who I never met - died in a car wreck in the 50s) is second row, the super pale guy fourth from the left.
B-24 bombardier. When they weren't bombing targets in Burma/Thailand from their bases in India, they were flying gasoline over the "Hump" into China.
Being in TexAgs jail changes a man……..no, not really
Good deal. Pretty sure my granddad was based out of Australia. My mom has a map of his somewhere that he annotated with some of their missions. I'll have to see if she can dig it up.
This is my Dad's "Chit Patch" from WW2. It was used to identify downed Allied air crew to Chinese civilians, and asks for protection and return to friendly lines.
Hey B-1...there's a Chit Patch on display at the American Airlines museum in Ft. Worth. I'd never seen one before and asked my Dad about it (he was a Hump Pilot during WWII...flew the C-46 and was based out of Misamari). He had one as well, but didn't have it when I asked him about it in the late 90's). That's very cool that you have your father's.
I was at D/FW Sunday waiting for a delayed flight and decided to go up to Founders Plaza and watch airplanes land. Saw lots of professional photographers set up as I pulled in. Found out an Antonov 124 was coming in from Central America to refuel and head back to Moscow.
Never seen one live and in the flesh. Was awesome.
I was at D/FW Sunday waiting for a delayed flight and decided to go up to Founders Plaza and watch airplanes land. Saw lots of professional photographers set up as I pulled in. Found out an Antonov 124 was coming in from Central America to refuel and head back to Moscow.
Never seen one live and in the flesh. Was awesome.
Oddly enough, I see them pretty regularly at our airport here in Medford, Oregon. It's apparently a convenient refueling spot with a large enough runway to accommodate them. We also have a helicopter manufacturing company here call Erickson, that makes firefighting helicopters and uses them to ship them back to Asia and Eastern Europe.
A few pretty spectacular one that Elwyn shot on the mach loop a few weeks ago. Makes fat amy look pretty good
It may be a generation old, but the F-15 is still a fine looking bird and a worthy opponent for any adversary.
I wouldn't say any adversary. My wife's family is really good friends with an F-15 pilot who grew up in their church. Met him a couple of times, and he once told us a story about a training exercise with F-22's. He thought he was good (he is), but he was getting murdered all day and didn't even know he was in trouble until someone told him he was dead. He got a single kill because the ABM who respawned him took some pity and put him right up a 22's tail pipe, and the 22 couldn't "see" him or do anything about it until he spawned. It really wasn't fair, but that was the only way he could even get close.