posted on Jul, 19 2004 @ 03:36 AM
Does anyone know when the RAF are taking their first batch of Typhoon fighters ????
The typhoon eneterd RAF service at the beginning of the year with No.17 Squadron and has since being joined by No.29 Squadron who were at the show I
got to chat to one of the pilots who was on the Static display - shame they were not selling the squadron badges like the other aircrews
One amazing thing I learnt yesterday -- one of the themes of the show was 50 years of the Hercules C-130 -- was that in November 1963 on the 8th, 21st
and 22nd, Lt. James H. Flatley III and his crew members, Lt. Cmdr. "Smokey" Stovall and Aviation Machinist's Mate (Jets) 1st Class Ed Brennan, made
21 full-stop landings and takeoffs in a C-130 Hercules aboard the ship. The tests were conducted 500 miles (900 km) out in the North Atlantic off the
coast of Massachusetts. In so doing, Forrestal and the C-130 set a record for the largest and heaviest airplane landing on a Navy aircraft carrier.
The Navy was trying to determine if the big Hercules could serve as a "Super-COD" � a "Carrier On-board Delivery" aircraft. The problem was there
was no aircraft which could provide resupply to a carrier in mid ocean. The Hercules was stable, reliable, and had a long cruising range and high
payload.
The tests were more than successful. At 85,000 pounds (38 t), the C-130F came to a complete stop within 267 feet (81 m), and at the maximum load, the
plane used only 745 feet (227 m) for take-off. The Navy concluded that with the C-130 Hercules, it would be possible to lift 25,000 pounds (11 t) of
cargo 2,500 miles (4,000 km) and land it on a carrier. However, the idea was considered a bit too risky for routine COD operations. The C-2A Greyhound
program was developed and the first of these planes became operational in 1965. For his effort, the Navy awarded Lt. Flatley the Distinguished Flying
Cross.
Video of C-130 landing on USS Forrestal
Video of C-130 taking off from USS Forrestal
[edit on 19-7-2004 by Popeye]