From: Mike Harr
Date: 10/22/2014 6:22:57 AM
To: Mike Harr
Subject: Aerial Refueling over Afghanistan
This is cool!
*KC-10 refuels another and then an F-16 and A-10
Warthogs; pretty neat**.*
*Unlike the KC-135 tanker where the boom operator (boomer) lies on his
stomach to view out a window to refuel other aircraft, the KC-10 boomer
sits in a comfortable chair and looks out a picture window during
refueling. Think what it would look like if a large aircraft like the C-5M,
C-17, B-52, B1, or B-2 came into view.*
*Adjust your speakers to catch the cockpit conversations.*
http://www.liveleak.com/ll_embed?f=61e402f990ac
*KC-10 refuels another and then an F-16 and A-10
Warthogs; pretty neat**.*
*Unlike the KC-135 tanker where the boom operator (boomer) lies on his
stomach to view out a window to refuel other aircraft, the KC-10 boomer
sits in a comfortable chair and looks out a picture window during
refueling. Think what it would look like if a large aircraft like the C-5M,
C-17, B-52, B1, or B-2 came into view.*
*Adjust your speakers to catch the cockpit conversations.*
http://www.liveleak.com/ll_embed?f=61e402f990ac
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Thank you Capt Shutack. This is a great article about the
DC-3.
From: dshutack@gmail.com
To:
To:
Date: Wed, Oct 22, 2014 at 4:17 PM
Subject: Fwd: That Old Warhorse the Douglas DC-3 ...
Subject: Fwd: That Old Warhorse the Douglas DC-3 ...
Great information to
know. I guess the point is, old is not new and old gives way to
new. If old was always there, we would still have buggy whip
factories. I can say this since I'm old and have given way to new.
That Old Warhorse
the Douglas DC-3
|
|
The DC-3
'It groaned, it protested, it rattled, it ran hot, it ran
cold, it ran rough, it staggered along on hot days and scared you half to
death.
'Its wings flexed and twisted in a horrifying manner, it
sank back to earth with a great sigh of relief. But it flew and it flew and it
flew.'
This is the memorable description by Captain Len Morgan,
a former pilot with Braniff Airways, of the unique challenge of flying a
Douglas DC-3.
It's carried more passengers than any plane in history, but -
Now the DC-3 has been grounded by EU health and safety
rules.
The DC-3 served in World
War II , Korea and Vietnam, and was a favourite among pilots!
For more than 70 years, the aircraft known through a
variety of nicknames --- the Doug, the Dizzy, Old Methuselah, the Gooney Bird,
the Grand Old Lady --- but which to most of us is simply the Dakota --- has been the workhorse
of the skies.
With its
distinctive nose-up profile when on the ground and extraordinary capabilities
in the air, it transformed passenger travel, and served in just about every military conflict from
World War II onwards.
Now the Douglas DC-3 --- the most successful plane ever made, which first took to
the skies just over 30 years after the Wright Brothers' historic first flight --- is to carry passengers
in Britain for the last time.
Romeo Alpha and Papa Yankee, the last two
passenger-carrying Dakotas in the UK , are being forced into retirement because
of --- yes,
you've guessed it --- health & safety rules.
Their owner, Coventry-based Air Atlantique, has
reluctantly decided it would be too expensive to fit the required emergency- escape slides and
weather-radar
systems required by new European rules for their 65-year-old planes, which
served with the RAF during the war.
Mike Collett, the company's chairman, says: "We're
very saddened."
The end of the passenger-carrying British Dakotas is a
sad chapter in the story of the most remarkable aircraft ever built, surpassing
all others in length of service, dependability and achievement.
It has been a luxury airliner, transport plane, bomber,
fighter and flying hospital, and introduced millions of people to the concept of air
travel.
It has flown more miles, broken more records, carried
more passengers and cargo, accumulated more flying time and performed more
'impossible' feats than any other plane in history, even in these days of
super-jumbos that can circle the world non-stop.
Indeed, at one point, 90 percent of the world's air
traffic was operated by DC-3s.
More than 10,500 DC-3s have been built since the
prototype was rolled out to astonished onlookers at Douglas's Santa Monica
factory in 1935.
With its eagle beak, large square windows and sleek metal
fuselage, it was luxurious beyond belief, in contrast to the wood-and-canvas
bone shakers of the day, where passengers had to huddle under blankets against
the cold.
Even in the 1930s, the early Dakotas had many of the
comforts we take for granted today, like on-board loos and a galley that could
prepare hot food.
Early menus included wild-rice pancakes with blueberry syrup, served on bone china
with silver service.
For the first time, passengers were able to stand- up and walk- around while the plane
was airborne.
But the design had one vital feature, ordered by
pioneering aviator Charles Lindbergh, who was a director of TWA, which placed
the first order for the plane.
The DC-3 should always, Lindbergh directed, be
able to fly on one-engine!
Pilots have always loved it, not just because of its
rugged reliability but because, with no computers on board, it is the epitome
of 'flying by the seat- of- the- pants'.
One aviator memorably described the Dakota as a
'collection of parts flying in loose formation', and most reckon they can land
it pretty well on a postage stamp.
Captain Len Morgan says: 'The Dakota could lift virtually
any load strapped to its back and carry it anywhere and in any weather safely.'
It is the very human scale of the plane that has so
endeared it to successive generations.
With no pressurization in
the cabin, it flies low and slow.
And unlike modern jets,
it's still possible to see the world go by from the cabin of a Dakota.
( The name,
incidentally, is an acronym for Douglas Aircraft Company Transport Aircraft. )
As a former Pan Am stewardess puts it: "From the
windows, you seldom look upon a flat, hazy, distant surface to the world.
"Instead, you see the features of the earth --- curves of mountains, colours
of lakes, cars moving on roads, ocean waves crashing on shores, and cloud
formations as a sea of popcorn and powder puffs.'
But it is for heroic feats in military service that the
legendary plane is most distinguished.
It played a major role in
the invasion of Sicily , the D-Day landings, the Berlin Airlift, and the Korean & Vietnam
wars, performing astonishing feats along the way.
When General Eisenhower was asked what he believed were
the foundation stones for America's success in World War II, he named the
bulldozer, the jeep, the half-ton truck, and the Dakota.
When the Burma Road was captured by the Japanese, and the
only way to send supplies into China was over the mountains at 19,000 ft, the
Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek said: 'Give me 50 DC-3s, and the Japs can have
the Burma Road .'
In 1945, a Dakota broke the world record for a flight
with an engine out of action, travelling for 1,100 miles from Pearl Harbor to
San Diego, with just one-propeller working.
Another in RNZAF service lost a wing after colliding
mid-air with a Lockheed bomber. Defying all the rules of aerodynamics, and with
only a stub remaining, the plane landed, literally, on a wing and a prayer at
Whenuapai Airbase.
Once, a Dakota pilot
carrying paratroops across the Channel to France heard an enormous bang.
He went aft to find that
half the plane had been blown away, including part of the rudder. With engines still turning, he managed to skim the
wave-tops before finally making it to safety.
Another wartime Dakota was rammed by a Japanese fighter
that fell to earth, while the American crew returned home in their severely
damaged ---
but still airborne --- plane, and were given the distinction of 'downing an enemy
aircraft'.
Another DC-3 was peppered with 3,000 bullets in the wings
and fuselage by Japanese fighters.
It made it back to base,
was repaired with canvas patches and glue, and then sent back into the air.
During the evacuation of Saigon in 1975, a Dakota crew
managed to cram aboard 98 Vietnamese orphans, although the plane was supposed
to carry no more than 30 passengers.
In addition to its rugged military service, it was the
DC-3 which transformed commercial -passenger flying in the post-war years. Easily
converted to a passenger plane, it introduced the idea of affordable air travel
to a world which had previously seen it as exclusively for the rich.
Flights across America could be completed in about 15
hours (with three stops for refuelling), compared with the previous reliance on
short hops in commuter aircraft during the day and train- travel overnight.
It made the world a smaller place, gave people the
opportunity for the first time to see previously inaccessible destinations, and became a romantic
symbol of travel.
The DC-3's record has not always been perfect.
After the war, military-surplus Dakotas were cheap, often
poorly maintained, and pushed to the limit by their owners. Accidents were
frequent.
One of the most tragic happened in 1962, when Zulu Bravo,
a Channel Airways flight from Jersey, slammed into a hillside on the Isle of
Wight in thick fog. All three crew and nine of the 14 passengers died, but the
accident changed the course of aviation history. The local radar,
incredibly, had been switched off because it was a Sunday. The national
air safety rules were changed to ensure it never happened again.
'The DC-3 was, and is, unique,' wrote the novelist and
aviation writer Ernest Gann, 'since no other flying machine has cruised every
sky known to mankind, been so admired, cherished, glamorized, known the touch
of so many pilots and sparked so many tributes..
"It was without
question the most successful aircraft ever built, and even in this jet- age, it seems likely that
the surviving DC-3s may fly about their business forever."
This may be no exaggeration. Next month, Romeo Alpha and
Papa Yankee begin a farewell tour of Britain 's airports before carrying their
final passengers at the International Air Tattoo at RAF Fairford on July 16, but after their retirement, there will still be Dakotas
flying in the farthest corners of the world, kept going with love, dedication
and sheer ingenuity.
Nearly
three-quarters of a century after they first entered service, it's still
possible to get a Dakota ride somewhere in the world.
I recently took a DC-3 into the heart of the Venezuelan
jungle ---
to the "Lost World" made famous in the novel by Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle. It is one of the most remote regions on the planet --- where the venerable old
planes have long been used because they can be manoeuvred like birds in the
wild terrain.
It's a scary experience being strapped into a torn canvas
chair, raked back at an alarming angle ( walking along the aisle of a
stationary Dakota is like climbing a steep hill ) as you wait for
take-off. The engines spew smoke and oil
as they shudder into life with what DC-3 fans describe as 'music', but to me sounded like
the hammering of a thousand pneumatic - drills.
But soon you are skimming the legendary flat-topped
mountains protruding from the jungle below, purring over wild rivers and the
Angel Falls , the world's highest rapids. Suddenly
the ancient plane drops like a stone to a tiny landing strip just visible in
the trees. The pilot dodges bits of dismantled DC-3 engines scattered on
the ground and avoids a stray dog as he touches down with scarcely a bump.
How did he do it without air traffic control and the
minimum of navigational aids?
''C'est facile --- it's easy," he shrugged.
Today, many DC-3s live-on throughout the world as crop-sprayers, surveillance patrols, air
freighters in forgotten African states, and even luxury executive transports. One, owned by a Houston lumber company, had mink-covered
door- knobs,while another belonging to
a Texas rancher had sofas and reclining chairs upholstered with the skins of
unborn calves..
In Jaipur , India , a Dakota is licensed for flying
wedding ceremonies .
Even when they have ended their aerial lives, old Dakotas
have become mobile homes, hamburger stands and hen houses. One even serves as a football team changing room.
Clark Gable's private DC-3, which once ferried chums such
as John and Bobby Kennedy, Marilyn Monroe, Frank Sinatra and Ronald Reagan, is
in a theme park in San Marino. But don't
assume it won't run again. Some of the oldest hulks have been put back in the
skies.
The ancient piston- engines are replaced by modern turboprops, and many a
pilot of a modern jet has been astonished to find a Dakota alongside him on the
climb away from the runway.
So what is the enduring secret of the DC-3?
David Egerton, professor of the history of science and
technology at Imperial College , London , says we should rid our minds of the
idea that the most recent inventions are always the best.
'The very fact that the
DC-3 is still around and performing a useful role in the world is a powerful
reminder that the latest and most expensive technology is not always the one
that changes history,' he says.
It's long been an aviation axiom that 'the only replacement
for the DC-3 is another DC-3'.
So it's fortunate that at least one
seems likely to be around for a very long time to come.
In 1946, a DC-3 on a flight from Vienna to Pisa crashed
into the top of the Rosenlaui Glacier in the Swiss Alps. The aircraft was not damaged and all the passengers were
rescued, but it quickly began to disappear as a blinding snowstorm raged.
Swiss engineers have calculated that it will take 600 years for it to slide- down inside the glacier
and emerge at the bottom.
Dick Shutack
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Great video Bill!! This should give
some of our Navy pilots a big thrill. David W. Skjerven
From: Wbrindell@aol.com
To:
Sent: 10/25/2014 5:30:15 P.M. Central Daylight Time
Subj: flying video
To:
Sent: 10/25/2014 5:30:15 P.M. Central Daylight Time
Subj: flying video
Those were the days my friends.
Pedro
PS: The video appears to quit about halfway through. Stay with it.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
This carrier landing has
been in the HL before but worth it to watch a 2nd time.
From: Wbrindell@aol.com
To: DWSkjerven@aol.com,
Sent: 11/1/2014 11:31:04 A.M. Central Daylight Time
Subj: Fwd: Bravo Zulu Marine Harrier Emergency Landing
To: DWSkjerven@aol.com,
Sent: 11/1/2014 11:31:04 A.M. Central Daylight Time
Subj: Fwd: Bravo Zulu Marine Harrier Emergency Landing
Wow
This is incredible. Like the pilot said, they practice landing on the
same spot.
But to place the jet down so its nose
hit the stool without him seeing it is incredible.
Incredible Jet Landing on an Aircraft Carrier
THINK OF THE MILLION$$$$ THIS SAVED
AMERICA!!!!!
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