The_Russian
Low Level Pilot
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2003
- Posts
- 2,574
Yeah, he like to call his show Ace Fighter Jet.My suspicion is that he welcomed that misunderstanding. However you look at the his profile, it makes no mention of being an IAF pilot.
From what I have been told, becoming an IAF pilot is more of a life-long contribution to the country. One of our co-pilots is ex-IAF (non-pilot). I will ask her about the process next time I see her.He was at Riddle from 1970 to 1973, so we'd have to believe that between High school (of the Israeli equivelant) and 20 y/o he bacame a fighter pilot (without a degree), left the IAF and enrolled in ERAU. Maybe that's realistic in Israel, perhaps the IAF takes teenagers with no degree and makes then fighter pilots for a couple of years and then lets them go on with no commitment. It wouldn't happen in the US. Maybe I'm missing a piece of the puzzle, but it seems pretty unlikely to me.
Yeppers. I would too!Somehow, I think that given the tone of his page, if he'd flown an F-15 (A-4 F-4, Mirage, whatever) in the IAF, he's state that in big bold letters.
Thanks. I am not sure why I had so much trouble finding that.Here's that comes up when you search for his name on myspace. This is where I noticed the age. It has a link to his profile which has the rest of his narrative:
http://search.myspace.com/index.cfm?...ID=FindAFriend
Did you notice that half of his panel remained in the Eastern configuration? What a human factors nightmare! Obviously he was not initially trained in the US or Israel on these types of indications. This brings the question:
Was this guy ever formerly trained for instrument flying on a Russian panel?
and,
When he came out of the cloud, did he refer to those Russian indications to attempt to correct his attitude?
In addition, most panels I have seen for a Western L-39 have had a full panel conversion for pilot transition.
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