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- Jul 3, 2012
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Velocity173
Looks like the Diamond got hit by wake from the solo.
Diamond...the formation. Not the plane sitting on the ramp. They got a little squirrelly around the 19 second point...damn close
That looks like a Cirrus, not a Diamond...Looks like the Diamond got hit by wake from the solo.
Not much room for error in a T-38 form and probably not as forgiving as an F-16 either.pishhh, that's every Tuesday 2nd go every day for me on a form approach: "stop pulsing the stick dude....stop pulsing the stick dude...slooooow your breathing, stop pulsing the-- I got the aircraft.[6-9 seconds of smooth butta' handflown bliss]... Alright brother I got ya lined up, watch your cues, wiggle your fingers, rellaaaaax... ok you ready? Sweet, you got the aircraft.....stop pulsing the stick dude *"altitude altitude" chime* stop pulsing the stick dude....."
Another view. Three’s heart rate went up a few beats.
And we got the fatality track record to go with it. To wit, no more form landings. They were awesome when done well.Not much room for error in a T-38 form and probably not as forgiving as an F-16 either.
Largely correct. What gets missed a little is that the initial wing dip is the result of the jet wash of the high pass jet. The lurch up into #1 is actually the aircraft attempting to correct for the jetwash while maintaining formation symmetry. You can't see it readily, but he's goosing the power to keep the closure up and maintain line, after getting "settled" by the high pass jetwash. Problem is the jetwash-generated wingdip gives him some HCA (heading crossing angle) into lead's line. That's where the potential loss of nose-tail separation occurs, as the power goose becomes phase-lagged into too much closure from lead.Question for you military formation guys: It looks to me that the #3 had to use right rudder to create separation because a bank at that point would have gotten up into #1, is that correct?
Hard to believe anything can be that scary in something with a yeet seat.Not much room for error in a T-38 form and probably not as forgiving as an F-16 either.
Dunno how you do it, Gonzo. My son jokingly says "idiots trying to kill you" but hell, that's backseat in a T-6- no comparison.pishhh, that's every Tuesday 2nd go every day for me on a form approach: "stop pulsing the stick dude....stop pulsing the stick dude...slooooow your breathing, stop pulsing the-- I got the aircraft.[6-9 seconds of smooth butta' handflown bliss]... Alright brother I got ya lined up, watch your cues, wiggle your fingers, rellaaaaax... ok you ready? Sweet, you got the aircraft.....stop pulsing the stick dude *"Altitude.. Altitude" chime* stop pulsing the stick dude....."
Oh, I'm very much planning on it. Problem is that with my proximity to retirement, and the service's current stance on social media, has everybody pretty paranoid. Not to get too into details, but I've been the target of recurrent tone-policing at work. So far have fared relatively well in so far as haven't received actual career ending punishment yet. I do have former coworkers and service peers who did actually get NJP'd over leadership taking a dim view of their exposure, opinions, or approach to their social media use/promotion. So I walk a bit more nervously these days, ngl. That's why I'm taking a gratuitously conservative approach by withholding any attempt at formal publishing, until I have my jelly of the month club membership in the bag. The service has a big retention and recruitment problem, and the censorious landscape of present circumstances is not helping matters one bit.Dunno how you do it, Gonzo. My son jokingly says "idiots trying to kill you" but hell, that's backseat in a T-6- no comparison.
I'd bet you could fill a book with stories...
Whatsa bunt?Largely correct. What gets missed a little is that the initial wing dip is the result of the jet wash of the high pass jet. The lurch up into #1 is actually the aircraft attempting to correct for the jetwash while maintaining formation symmetry. You can't see it readily, but he's goosing the power to keep the closure up and maintain line, after getting "settled" by the high pass jetwash. Problem is the jetwash-generated wingdip gives him some HCA (heading crossing angle) into lead's line. That's where the potential loss of nose-tail separation occurs, as the power goose becomes phase-lagged into too much closure from lead.
He/she did the right thing by slipping out with rudder, a bunt would have served a similar purpose, but these demo team guys don't have that luxury of vertical stack decon like we do in primary training at medium altitudes. It's impossible to see the actual clearance from a rear angle (parallax). It's chopping the power what actually saved the contact, not the slip.
Maybe that guy tried to bundt but popped it upPushing over (down).
Nauga,
and a cake, yes
The Diamond looks so much better when they went back to their old spacing a few years back. For the longest time (after 2005) they looked like this.Just for fun, here are a few pics I took at the Saturday show:
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