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Cool visitor at work today
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Sweet!
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T-28 Trojan?
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Sweet looking bird. Thanks for posting! :salute:
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decent pics for a cell phone |
Nice one.....we had the Vulcan at an airfield close to me a few years back but she had to be ferried there :doh:
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That looks to be in good shape. Is it the one out of florida?
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Now that's a trainer!:shucks:
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didnt specify exactly where, he was in a hurry to get back before dark. (he wasnt present when the pics were taken) He took off and flew a tight pattern, gave us a low fly by over the runway and half rolled it in the climb, and then... literally flew off into the sunset. |
Nice plane theres a couple here in florida.
The distinctive thing about them is the short fat prop. Thats a ton of bite there. Probably plants you in the seat when you set it in. |
I dont claim to know anything much about the T-28 Trojan...
but on his takeoff he had what appeared to be a speed brake or dive brake deployed underneath the belly. I mean this thing had dive brake written all over it figuratively speaking. Normal procedure or pilot error?:hmmm: I youtubed about a dozen trojan takeoffs... didnt see it in any of them |
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http://www.airport-data.com/articles...-Rev-4;14.html |
Yeah... he goofed is my guess.
I was watching him climb out, wheels went up, he came by with his brake deployed. i said to my friend "Uhhh his speed brake is out, I bet he is wondering why his climb performance sucks." but if i have learned anything in my 12 years in aviation... its that i dont know everything and always stand to learn something. that said, I assumed there was a reason for his procedure. probably error though as it was retracted when he started the engine, and he deployed it during taxi and left it down. perhaps he was testing it, and then got side tracked.:06: beats me EDIT: Note... he was preceded in takeoff by a slow single engine aircraft. It is possible that he was using this technique to increase his spacing between himself and the preceding departure as they were both going to be in the pattern. |
Maybe he was just trying to see how much power that plane's engine had. Take off with airbrake down...not bad, but it ain't no Crusader... :up:
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I had an instructor years ago, he was an F-18 pilot way back when.
He told the story of one of his wingmen... the plane got struck by lightning and due to some sort of electrical fault as a result of the strike, the wings began to fold as if they were commanded to do so. trouble is the flight was cruising along at altitude in less than ideal weather. I dont recall how it ended... i think the guy had to pull the loud handles. |
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