Just to tie up a couple of loose ends re the Vulcan.
During the Falklands War, a Vulcan was used in a raids against Argentinian positions on the islands, the first being on the airfield at Port Stanley. Operation Black Buck had seven planned raids, of which five were completed. At 6,800 nautical miles (round trip) they were, at the time, the longest range bombing operations in history. The Vulcan was a medium range aircraft, being designed for attacks on the Soviet Union and other Warsaw Pact countries, consequently an in flight refuelling plan had to be devised. The raids were carried out from Ascension Island and the attack aircraft was supported by eleven tankers. Some of the tanker aircraft were used to refuel other tankers so they could transfer fuel to the Vulcan at extended range. On the first raid, the Vulcan was refuelled seven times on the outward journey and once on the return leg. There's a graphic showing the refuelling plan here: Wikipedia - Operation Black Buck. An animation of the refuelling scheme is featured in this video: This Ch 4 programme was shown in 2012 on the thirtieth anniversary of the Falklands War. If you have a reasonably fast connection it's worth downloading. |
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Oh, I know one way was Imperial gallons and the other way was metric gallons. :eyebrow: |
The story of the two pilots who managed to get their P-40s off the ground at Pearl Harbor.
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Battle of Britain
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Why Hitler thought they could win, and why they didn't.
It started in July of 1940, and was intense, but wasn't non-stop. On one day, September 7, nearly 1,000 bombers struck at London. The planes filled a 20 mile wide(32 km), 40 mile long(64 km), 2 mile thick(3 km), hunk of sky. That attack on London resulted in 300 civilians dead, and another 1,300 injured. That's because the Brits were cowering in bomb shelters, instead of coming out with their faces painted half blue, and shaking their fists at the sky, while cursing the bombers, like real heroes. :haha: Quote:
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"Excuse me, is this part of the in-flight entertainment?"
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They forgot to throw out the anchor on the other side too.
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Idk what happened there...Comments were all over the place. He did it on purpose, he didn't do it on purpose. He hit something in the water, he was trying not to hit something in the water.
I checked (a little, very little) and, World Stunt Landing appears to not be a thing. |
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The early aircraft fired the imagination of millions, and instantly became the best pantie remover since alcohol. So naturally they became a subject of songs, as moon, June, spoon, was getting old. They hoped aircraft songs would spark some adrenaline and spending. Not that everyone in the music business is a crass money grubber, only the ones who control the business half. :haha:
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Icelandair Boeing 757 in Aurora Borealis livery. |
I have very fond memories of Icelandair. I don't remember much about the airline or flight, but their deal where you can stop over in Iceland for a day to and/or from Europe is a really cool deal. A day to explore another country for no addition cost, especially when the country is as geologically interesting as Iceland is, is a sweet opportunity.
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Aircraft abuse, po little plane. http://cellar.org/2012/nono.gif
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Ima gonna drop this spacey right here. ;)
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I have one of those patches in a box somewhere
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