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Touchdown! Greaser!
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Cowboy - yeehah!
The OMFG WE HAVE TO BAN THESE THINK OF THE CHILDERN!!!!!! crowd is out in full force on this one.
Yup...I don't know how in the world that pilot survived...
RIP to the innocents lost
We prove every year that low altitude stuff is extremely dangerous. No telling what the "floor" was supposed to be for the Hunter's act, but I could support a minimum of a 500' floor for vertical maneuvers to reduce the chance of a minor mistake resulting in a crash. Low, relatively level passes? Go as low as you want.
Barring mechanical failure of some sort a well-flown airshow maneuver would have checkpoints for the first 270 deg of the overhead giving ample opportunity to abort if off parameters. Still someone manages to do this every year or two.Dad flew the Hunter when he was in the RAF (before the Lightning).
He said he (of course) entered into the maneuver too low. [...] Said he should have unloaded the controls instead of tightening but at that low of an altitude he didn't have much of a choice...
Quarter-Clover, unknown if it was a planned or ad-hoc figure.The photo nerds over there in Europe are definitively on their game when it comes to capturing flying events.
Looks like a botched cloverleaf. Problem with these legacy fighters is they don't make good low-level aero platforms. They take too much real estate for OTT maneuvers and they can't rate the nose worth a %hit even an RCH below corner, let alone with stuff hanging off them. Not exactly the contraption I want to be doing that stuff below 1k AGL. A real tragedy and more fodder for the pedestrian lynch mob to keep shutting down the skies to those who dare fly.
Quarter-Clover, unknown if it was a planned or ad-hoc figure.
The Quarter-Clover doesn't really have any good decision-gates so hard to know if you are OK or not until it's too late.
Friend of mine in the UK knows the pilot well and is of course pulling for him to survive, terrible accident.
Prayers for survivors and the family and friends of those lost.
'Gimp
He was simply too low. It's apparent when you watch the event unfolding. Happens quite often. Many videos which show this same situation.
Considering how many airshows there actually are, around the world, with so many performers at each event, and with so many figures per performance, it actually does not happen often at all, let alone quite often.He was simply too low. It's apparent when you watch the event unfolding. Happens quite often. Many videos which show this same situation.
He was simply too low. It's apparent when you watch the event unfolding. Happens quite often. Many videos which show this same situation.
For the Hunter? I find that hard to believe that performance is so uncertain that a min altitude and entry speed and speed and altitude over the top couldn't be set as they are with other (ex) tactical jets.The issue with the specific figure in this accident, the quarter-clover, is that it does not have any good places for decision gates...
On that we agree, and it's still possible to screw up with too little in the pull or too much hesitation and get yourself in a corner but these things are usually messed up before the down leg....and once the energy is directed downwards few outs.
Maybe I should have been more specific, because the quarter-clover is a true 3D/six-degrees-of-freedom maneuver, basically a loop with a roll component, much like a barrel roll it lacks good/easy decision gates after the entry, last easy out is at the top but no good decision gate according to my airshow performer friend, who knows the pilot in the accident aircraft.For the Hunter? I find that hard to believe that performance is so uncertain that a min altitude and entry speed and speed and altitude over the top couldn't be set as they are with other (ex) tactical jets.
On that we agree, and it's still possible to screw up with too little in the pull or too much hesitation and get yourself in a corner but these things are usually messed up before the down leg.
Nauga,
who tests to press
We are definitely in agreement here and with that I'll defer my comments on acro checkpoints to a later time and another thread.This was a real tragedy, hoping for best outcome for all effected.
I wouldn't call Jimmy a 'crowd'. That's just him. He throws crap out all the time with no references.The last 3rd party loss of life in an airshow in the UK was in 1952. So I'm not sure what the "this happens so often!" crowd are on about.
I wouldn't call Jimmy a 'crowd'. That's just him. He throws crap out all the time with no references.
I'd say it's quite a few needless deaths which have also resulted in quite a few spectator deaths. Not difficult to research.
The Stearman accident with both the girl and the pilot killed, too low, too slow. Stalled it.
You have go back to the Ramstein accident, almost 30 years ago, for a similar airshow accident (not counting Galloping Ghost at Reno because that was not an airshow event).
Actually 13 years ago. Ukraine, 2002. 77 killed, 543 injured of which 100 had to be hospitalized:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sknyliv_air_show_disaster