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EagleRJ said:F-104 = Dangerous Airplane.
Even Yeager is scared of them. There's a reason the Luftwaffe flew them and ended up suffering around a 60% attrition rate. It's the plane the term Widowmaker was coined for. I personally wouldn't set foot in one.
If you want to get your need for speed on, you could try either Incredible Adventures, which sells rides in MiG-29s, MiG-21s, and MiG-25s out of Zhukovski airfield near Moscow, or Wings over South Africa (I think that's what they're called). They sell rides in a BAC Lightning and some other stuff out of Cape Town.
I only know of one privately owned T-38. No idea if rides are available.
WMUSIGPI said:Wasn't one of the automaker CEO's a 104 owner/pilot (retired AF guy that flew them and then bought one) Coulda swore I saw a show on Discovery Wings about the guy flying around Willow Run.
There was a Mig 15 based in Latrobe, PA but I think the owner moved the plane to Nevada this past fall.
Traumahawk said:The F-104 is only dangerous if you don't know how to keep it above 180 over the fence---Or, in Yeagers case, go for a high alititude record on a whim....
The Right Stuff made it look like a joyride. But Yeagar I think was part of a program that was testing various kinds of control augmentation with jets at high altitude. Kind of like those they used on the X-15 and later on the space flights. Still, it was a cool sequence in the movie.
Dizel8 said:The F-104 because I once sat on a beach as a kid, when two of those came screaming by in burner at 200 feet. It was unreal and one of the greatest things I have seen, not to mention heard!
jetdriven said:F-104 is the ultimate plane anhd has no equal. 252 MPH landing speed and Daryl Greenameyer set a speed record in his before he crashed it. it was something like 998 MPH at sea level.
KeroseneSnorter said:There used to be a private TF-104 at Williams Gateway in PHX. Don't know if it is still there though.
As said before, It is a very hot airplane.....Be careful who the PIC is. Stub wings don't lend themselves to low timer rich guys.
CorpLearDriver said:The Right Stuff made it look like a joyride. But Yeagar I think was part of a program that was testing various kinds of control augmentation with jets at high altitude. Kind of like those they used on the X-15 and later on the space flights. Still, it was a cool sequence in the movie.
414Flyer said:That might have been about Lutz, the then chrysler CEO who was ex USMC and flew an L-39.
CorpLearDriver said:From what I understand, working with that airplane I am told, brought back some of the love of aviation for Greenameyer after he lost that B-29 that burned up on the glacier in Greenland I believe it was.
414Flyer said:I think the F-104 saga of his, predates the B-29 story by quite a few years.CorpLearDriver said:From what I understand, working with that airplane I am told, brought back some of the love of aviation for Greenameyer after he lost that B-29 that burned up on the glacier in Greenland I believe it was.
414Flyer said:Oh okay..i thought you were mentioning the previous F-104 story. Wonder what his low level run came out to in Mach speed.
psysicx said:I just looked up the Magister and what a cool looking plane.Does anybody have any performance information on it?
CorpLearDriver said:I loved watching and listening to that airplane. As a kid, I remember seeing a couple of them at Ontario, CA and I believe the Arizona Air Guard had them for a time. Awesome machine.
I wonder if that is equivilant sea level speed. Greenameyer set that record over a dry lakebed near Tonopah, NV. He took ten years building the plane in his garage in Van Nuys from spare parts he found wherever he could. Of course, flying it wasn't a real stretch for him because he was an SR-71 test pilot and had flown an F-104 previously. He took off from Tonopah airport with just 17 minutes of fuel on board, made two sweeps across the lakebed and returned on fumes. Speed, 1010 mph and 1020 mph per sweep.
The sponsor of his airplane at that time was Ed Browning of Red Baron Aviation in Idaho. Greenameyer could get all the parts but couldn't get an engine and the DOD was trying to keep him from getting that. Browning was able to "borrow" and engine from someone for the flights. When Greenameyer had that hydraulic failure and had to punch our of the his 104 over Mojave, the loss of that engine really hurt Browning financially.
The wing area is the same as that of a C-150/152. The couple that owned the one as IWA were both former Air Force pilots and Greenameyer was involved with them too. He was teaching them the airplane. I lived 5 miles away from IWA and hung out there a lot at the time. The last I saw of the airplane it was sans engine sitting on the North ramp of IWA, not in the quansett-hut style shade hangar it occupied when I would watch it fly.
I use to sit out there and watch them doing touch an goes. I remember the mechanic working on the airplane. Once when they taxiied it over to a remote part of the ramp, they "ran it up" so's to speak and the mechanic chuckled and said "That's the sound of MONEY!"
From what I understand, working with that airplane I am told, brought back some of the love of aviation for Greenameyer after he lost that B-29 that burned up on the glacier in Greenland I believe it was.
Dizel8 said:Anyone know, where I can buy a ride in one?
Thanks,
D8
However, if you want a nice aileron roll/immelman/sliceback/loop/cuban 8/cloverleaf/lazy 8/barrel roll/split S combination...atpcliff said:If you want climb perfomance, check out the KC-135R.