Your dads not wrong though. What's under the hood during war time half way around the world especially during WWII is probably a very different animal than a museum piece that gets white glove treatment.
That was one of the most dangerous flight assignments in WWII, and not because of enemy action.Quote:
My grandfather flew the China-Burma-India Hump
Saturday, there was a tragic loss of a national treasure named "Texas Raiders" at an air show in Dallas. Here's a pilot's perspective on what the loss means. https://t.co/CTeCsIyJAS
— San Angelo Live (@SanAngeloLIVE) November 14, 2022
Been plenty of commercial crashes into urban areas. The AA flight ion Queens in 2001, there was another commuter flight that crashed into a house due to ice on wings, and was recently reminded of PSA 182 in San Diego in 1978.titan said:
On the 9/11 thread didn't an Iranian airline go down in a dense urban area after a collision? The risk from airlines is not any less than an air show centered over an airdrome.
80sGeorge said:
Just a guess but from flight path info available it appears the P63 got a little wider on his turn than either he or one of the P51s had previously flown. Know I'm stating the obvious but available data still interesting.
Maybe Gunny can opine but guessing the plan for the show was to have fast movers west of the runway center line and B17 on center.
1st image is the P63 last flight I believe. It appears tracking cuts off prior to his turn to final. This is only screenshot I could find on N6763 and that tail num doesn't show up with any results on my FlightRadar app. Scrubbed by NTSB?? Who knows but I believe it shows one north bound pass west of the centerline.
I've worked a number of air shows because we had a marketing simulator for our FBW helicopter we were developing.Gunny456 said:
First off it's aerobatics not acrobatics.
Fun to watch but you can only watch so many hammerheads, split "s", and aileron rolls .....
80sGeorge said:
Not finding any records for 6769
This is supposedly a pic of the P63 and I believe N6763 is correct. Doesn't explain why flight data is missing other than NTSB has scrubbed it.
Should say just because my free FlightRadar app doesn't show flights or flight playback for N6763 doesn't mean no info is available. Flightaware does list a record of the final 6 minute flight. Maybe if someone with paid subscription could see if more final flight info is available??
You are mistaken. Those flight tracker sites use a combo of FAA Radar data, and ADS-B out, which almost every plane has now. Flight plan does not matter. You can even build a Raspberry Pi receiver for about 100 bucks and see the flights yourself.Quote:
Icould be mistaken, but i don't think the flight tracker websites pick you up unless you've got a flight plan filled with the FAA. Those flights were most likely flown VFR with no filed flight plan. Nothing nefarious.
Gunny456 said:
I will be the first to admit I am biased here. I have been around those guys and watched the training, the professionalism, the attention to detail, the inspections, the briefings and planning etc. etc.
I have helped on maintenance and restoration work and know the level of expertese that the people overseeing and inspecting/performing the work have....and the attention to detail and how meticulous they are in assuring things are done correctly.
You are so right in how on the money as usually they, if they are lucky, just break even at the end of the year on cost.
I have my own oppinion as to what happened....and it is only an oppinion.....My bet is that something medically happened to the P-63 pilot...heart attack, anurism or something that incapacitated him. We may never know.
We can hold on to the fact that they were all doing what they loved to do when they passed.....I hope I am so lucky.
This is correct. I fly VFR a bunch and those ADSB tracking sites ALWAYS find me.CanyonAg77 said:You are mistaken. Those flight tracker sites use a combo of FAA Radar data, and ADS-B out, which almost every plane has now. Flight plan does not matter. You can even build a Raspberry Pi receiver for about 100 bucks and see the flights yourself.Quote:
Icould be mistaken, but i don't think the flight tracker websites pick you up unless you've got a flight plan filled with the FAA. Those flights were most likely flown VFR with no filed flight plan. Nothing nefarious.
What you won't see is all the military traffic. Pretty common to see trainers, tankers and transports, even AF1. What is very rare to see are fighters, attack aircraft, and bombers.
https://www.adsbexchange.com/
wbt5845 said:
I'm guessing it was a medical issue OR the B-17 was at the wrong place.
As I mentioned earlier, I've been on the engineering team for several of these aircraft. And I too would take a hard pass if offered a ride.
Having been on the design teams for fighters (F-16, 22 & 35), transports (C-17 and 130) and bombers (B-1 & 2) for the last 38 years, getting on a 70 year old airframe to fly around isn't appealing to me at all.
Incline strongly to a sudden medical issue too.wbt5845 said:
I'm guessing it was a medical issue OR the B-17 was at the wrong place.
As I mentioned earlier, I've been on the engineering team for several of these aircraft. And I too would take a hard pass if offered a ride.
Having been on the design teams for fighters (F-16, 22 & 35), transports (C-17 and 130) and bombers (B-1 & 2) for the last 38 years, getting on a 70 year old airframe to fly around isn't appealing to me at all.
This.GAC06 said:
The simplest and most likely explanation is that the pilot that hit the B-17 was fixated on the two aircraft he was following in the turn. He was maneuvering and maintaining altitude, which is completely inconsistent with being incapacitated.
Gunny456 said:
I have been in the CAF for 31 years. Have flown multiple times in the B-17 Texas Raiders.
The flights paths are planned out for each act and formation for each show day. At briefings before each of the shows the flight paths of each aircraft in that act are choreographed and drawn out on a chart. Every pilot is briefed with that. They practice that act many times during the year.
It is not a bunch of random flying around.
I've been a corsair junky also since Baa Baa Black Sheep. Built an attack formation of 4 models that I hung in my room as a kid. My oldest son loved the Skipper corsair in Disney's Planes (me too). He got to see his first corsair up close at WOH, then even closer on the Midway in San Diego. Then again at WOH. Just the coolest plane ever.JB!98 said:Thank you for your reply and I am sorry for the loss of your friends in such a tragic manner. The corsair is has been my favorite plane since the Baa Baa Black Sheep TV series, so was following it around the circuit every time. Not to be argumentative, but what I saw was not a normal part of the show. His exit from the pattern and exit from the show was not a normal. This would have been around 2009-2010 at the big airshow held at Randolph. After the dust settles it would be great if you could ask him about it. I am sure he still remembers it as it is not something I have or will forget.Gunny456 said:
This is not meant to call you out on this.
The guy flying that Corsair owns many high performance aircraft. He flies some of them in the Reno air races every year. A very accomplished military fighter pilot.
On high humidity days it is not uncommon for a performance prop fighter to display vapor formation off of high lift flight surfaces.
As I have posted those acts are well planned and well briefed before each and every show.
All CAF pilots that fly in the shows have to attend mandatory training and flying every year to be " air show qualified" for any act.
There is a pre flight briefing every morning before the show begins. Each and every flight path and position of each aircraft is drawn out and discussed. FAA reps attend those briefings and approve the flights.
Then there is de briefings after the show that afternoon.
To the crowds the acts and flights might look close or dangerous.... but are well planned and thought out for the upmost of safety.
Accidents certainly can happen and as long as humans are alive there are things that are going to happen.
Once again, not being belligerent by any means. I respect your posts on the outdoor board and depth of knowledge.