Heritage. It’s the Combat Box from WWII. Good enough for B-17s….It is interesting how the 3-ship seems to be the standard BUFF formation. Not a 2 ship or 4 ship......there must be a reason
Yeah. More like taking off around the same time.Not exactly what I would call a formation takeoff.
3-ship BUFF formation takeoff.
I know it's not the Thunderbirds...it's better!
"Keep sending them up!"
I'd say, unlike the tactical guys (you all), the planes in a heavy formation had more to do with the mission vs. anything else. I can't speak for the bomber guys (@hindsight2020 ?) but in tankers it was more about "how much gas do we need to offload and how many tankers is that going to take?" I've been in anywhere from 2- to 6-ships all based on mission requirements.It is interesting how the 3-ship seems to be the standard BUFF formation. Not a 2 ship or 4 ship......there must be a reason
And as I'm sure you're aware, we always planned the route to hit the maximum amount of clouds during AR as we could.
We can't. That's just what we told the receivers. This was actually more like it:and CAT, don’t forget the CAT. who knew that tankers could detect CAT?
Spares
Nauga,
AOG
Love the BUFF. If I remember correctly the 52 used spoilers instead of ailerons. Noticed that wings level takeoffs were not the norm in the video. I am assuming there was nothing to control roll till there was lift to kill with the spoilers. Educate me!!!
I used to fly from Eielson every April on the 135, into Grissom, which was a couple hours from home.
That's really interesting. I'd always considered the possibility of roll reversal with small spoiler deflections but never thought of nose-up. Makes sense with such a long swept wing.D models had ailerons. G & H models had flight spoilers, no ailerons. Initially, in a turn, there was a slight nose up moment as a result.
Always like the way this was depicted in "A Gathering of Eagles."A “formation takeoff” in the B-52 was actually a called a MITO, or minimum interval takeoff. Spacing for similar aircraft B-52G/B52-G was 12 seconds, as I recall.
I can't speak for the bomber guys (@hindsight2020 ?)
...neither can I, my preferred pronouns these days are he/him/tactrainer-guy. In the words of Vince Boudreau: If a man builds a thousand bridges....[redacted NSFW]
fwiw, Tumon Bay is the closest any buff crew will ever get to a MEZ these days. As such, you could do that mission set with a 757 in business interior config and SELCAL, two Growler pods, get rid of Larry, Curly and Moe, and you'd be ahead.
Now get off my lawn, I got loops to music I gotta get to this afternoon. Some of us gotta "work" for a livin'
What the hell is a MEZ?
Missile Engagement Zone
The kinetic guys can talk better about it, but I believe a F(ighter)EZ-MEZ and a threat ring are different things.We just called it the threat ring. Simpler times.
The kinetic guys can talk better about it, but I believe a F(ighter)EZ-MEZ and a threat ring are different things.
And as I'm sure you're aware, we always planned the route to hit the maximum amount of clouds during AR as we could.
Lol.haha I knew it! Don't forget, keep pointing at your chicks until they have to accept a merge with you
Lol.
Just wait until you hear about our "always turning directly at the sun" trick.