Rgbeard
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rgbeard
I heard it was an A-10 powered by an Audi TDI.
Conspiracy nuts' wet dream.
This is exactly what the Army Aviation does well in theory and practice…The forward rearm and refuel process is critical to the Army mission but not part of the other branches critical infrastructure. A dedicated III/V platoon is the largest sub unit within an Attack Battalion with Fuel and Ammo Haulers plus all the necessary equipment to set up in a field location. When properly equipped they can run five rearm and separate refuel points augmented by the Armament technicians found in the maintenance company. A good unit can break down and jump the FARP in a couple of hours…
Conspiracy nuts' wet dream.
??? https://www.pilotsofamerica.com/com...-we-should-keep-the-a-10.133532/#post-3124067Haven’t seen this posted yet but this is crazy. Brrrrrt! By the way, anyone heard of the new Black Fly aircraft?
https://news.yahoo.com/air-force-aircraft-land-michigan-212200325.html
“This is believed to be the first time in history that modern Air Force aircraft have intentionally landed on a civilian roadway on U.S. soil,” said Air Force Col. James Rossi,”
If the key point is “US soil,” I’m puzzled.
I suppose the scenario they’re practicing is landing when they cannot return to a base on US soil. For example, if the aircraft or base is battle-damaged.
I could understand practicing this with interceptor aircraft, but why an aircraft that’s intended for ground support? Who envisions ground combat on our soil, and why suddenly now?
“This is believed to be the first time in history that modern Air Force aircraft have intentionally landed on a civilian roadway on U.S. soil,” said Air Force Col. James Rossi,”
If the key point is “US soil,” I’m puzzled.
I suppose the scenario they’re practicing is landing when they cannot return to a base on US soil. For example, if the aircraft or base is battle-damaged.
I could understand practicing this with interceptor aircraft, but why an aircraft that’s intended for ground support? Who envisions ground combat on our soil, and why suddenly now?
Shucks, even their dams I've been told: Dr Shakti S Chauhan on Twitter: "Beautiful landing by a #MIG aircraft on a dam and even more stunning take off... @hvgoenka https://t.co/JPo6Cs93Vv" / Twittersoviet block countries have constructed their highways with that in mind for years.
I could understand practicing this with interceptor aircraft, but why an aircraft that’s intended for ground support? Who envisions ground combat on our soil, and why suddenly now?
Im more puzzled by the juxtaposition of “modern” and “A-10.”“This is believed to be the first time in history that modern Air Force aircraft have intentionally landed on a civilian roadway on U.S. soil,” said Air Force Col. James Rossi,”
If the key point is “US soil,” I’m puzzled.
Im more puzzled by the juxtaposition of “modern” and “A-10.”
They used to land all the time outside England AFB on dirt roads in the gunnery range all the time so I guess those were not "civlillian roadways"“This is believed to be the first time in history that modern Air Force aircraft have intentionally landed on a civilian roadway on U.S. soil,” said Air Force Col. James Rossi,”
i worked on the A-10 Development Program in the early ‘70’s, only 50 years ago
Just think of all the new landing options if we could land light planes on stretches of closed highways? I’m talking non-emergencies.
Just think of all the new landing options if we could land light planes on stretches of closed highways? I’m talking non-emergencies.
You can in Michigan as a civilian...with permission.
Granted... it is ND and half the population relies on farming. ...
sidejack of the thread: I had to laugh (not being snarky or snide)... anyway... I think the entire population relies on farming...
This is exactly what the Army Aviation does well in theory and practice…The forward rearm and refuel process is critical to the Army mission but not part of the other branches critical infrastructure. A dedicated III/V platoon is the largest sub unit within an Attack Battalion with Fuel and Ammo Haulers plus all the necessary equipment to set up in a field location. When properly equipped they can run five rearm and separate refuel points augmented by the Armament technicians found in the maintenance company. A good unit can break down and jump the FARP in a couple of hours…
The problem with operating fighters from roads or other austere sights is you have to provide support in terms of fuel, maintenance and ammo. In practice that is nearly impossible to accomplish. Each sortie might easily need 15,000 lbs of resupply. It makes for nice news stories but is of little practical use. The same applies to forward basing VSTOL aircraft. Resuppply becomes the critical issue.
And communication / intelligence.We always tend to fight the last war. In the next war we may not have air superiority. US forces have no real concept of fighting without complete air superiority.
I'm confused (again). What does a personal drone-like ultralight with 8 electric motors have to do with this A-10 thread?Haven’t seen this posted yet but this is crazy. Brrrrrt! By the way, anyone heard of the new Black Fly aircraft?...
I'm confused (again). What does a personal drone-like ultralight with 8 electric motors have to do with this A-10 thread?