DieselDragRacer
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2006
- Posts
- 11,056
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Back in the 70's and 80's when anyone with wings could do a PR event, go to an airshow, or do a fly-by, there were accidents, fatalities, botched flyby's and bad PR. So the Navy put controls on these events. I know in my P-3 outfit only certain pilots were allowed to go to airshows, and if flying at the airshow was involved it had to be a IP or Ck airman. They tightened up controls to avoid the bad PR, pretty well know if you screw up you are in big trouble. BTW at an impromptu Airshow at Utapao, Thailand in 1968 the skipper took our P-3 down the runway at 400 Kts at 100', pulled into a near hammer head, shutdown two engines and came the runway at 200' and 150 KTs, into a two engine relite and a full stop landing. The USAF base CO gave him holy hell. Can't do that stuff anymore.
Did they say that.....if so, now they are liars!
Btw...the altimeter "mistake" for 800 feet is .80.
Approach control-"altimeter is 30.10"
Superior F-18 Pilot- "Copy....29.30"
350kias with the gear down?
Lots of lectures from the F-18 guy who has no idea how subsonic flow is maintained on the type.
I'll admit I wrote that without being able to see the video first (I was at work when I wrote that).
I still stand by my statement that these guys were unfairly made an example of, and the community is less of a place without them.
The board and everyone else sided with them, and the Admiral decided on his own, and disregarded the advice given by those entrusted to come up with a decision. Apparently you don't trust those individuals anymore than you do the two pilots in question.
...i still stand by my statement that these guys were unfairly made an example of, and the community is less of a place without them. The board and everyone else sided with them, and the admiral decided on his own, and disregarded the advice given by those entrusted to come up with a decision. Apparently you don't trust those individuals anymore than you do the two pilots in question.
should not effect them, there is no way other than the pilot confessing that they did it, for the prospective employer to find out. PIRA does not go into military training. An easy answer that has been heard by many a recruiter is "There was a lack of flying opportunities for me in the Navy" It also depends upon the hiring cycle and I am getting out because I love flying airplanes, with the coming 2012 hiring boom they would be in good shape.Permanent ground assignments. Ouch!
I have a question. Say these guys decide to cut their losses and resign as soon as their commitment to the Navy is satisfied...then pursue a civilian career in aviation.
Is the information on this incident something a potential civilian airline employer would have access to?
To bottom line it...are they screwed future flying job-wise too?
I think they should be grounded for the simple fact that they did a LAME flyby with the gear down????