January 06, 2008
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April 16, 2006

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April 02, 2006
(Incidentally, the word viggen means thunderbolt, particularly one issued from Thor's warhammer, Mjölner).
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March 26, 2006
After more than 30 years of distinguished service to the US Navy, the last two squadrons of F-14 Tomcats ended their final combat deployments about two weeks ago. A couple of nice articles about this milestone event can be found here and here.
Check out this nice tribute video, too:
Q: Why is this awesome war machine being retired without (according to many) an adequate replacement (the Super Hornet lacks the range and power of the F-14)?
A: Maintenance expenses and age (the two are related).
Check out this comment from a former jet mechanic, giving a hint of the issues he (and other mechs) would face. Note also his love for the plane:
Posted Thu 16 March 2006 16:17
Thu 16 March 2006 16:17
As a retired Jet Mech. (AD1), last serving with the Tophatters of VF-14 at NAS Oceana in 1995, I am left with a sentimental lump in my throat as an era of Naval Aviation comes to a close. As labor intensive as they were, it was a proud sight and feeling to witness the awesome vibration and thunder on the TF-30 turbofans as the throttles were advanced to zone five behind the JBD's. Call it a labor of love I supose but intense it was. It was a nightmare for the hazmat P.O. trying to keep up with the constant mess of leaking hydraulic fluid and JP-5 under the engines forward fixed cowlings. As physics would prove, anything that was that fast and could turn on a dime and endured massive G- forces would naturally leak fluid from somewhere. A chapter in Naval Aviation to be admired and cherished for many years to come. Good-bye my friend!!
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March 19, 2006
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October 09, 2005
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October 02, 2005
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The unconventional, tail-sitting Lockheed XFV-1 was the prototype for a proposed U.S. Navy vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) point-defense interceptor. Designed to take off vertically, transition into conventional wings-level flight and then transition back to the vertical for landing, the airplane was powered by a 5,850 horsepower turboprop engine driving a pair of huge, three-bladed contra-rotating propellers. Fitted with a temporary undercarriage, the XFV-1 was first flown in a conventional mode at Edwards on June 16, 1954. Although, while in flight, it did demonstrate successful transitions from conventional into the vertical mode and back, its engine lacked sufficient power to guarantee safe VTOL operations and the whole concept of tail-sitting aircraft was soon abandoned in favor of designs employing vectored jet thrust.
- Photo and text via Edwards AFB
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September 27, 2005

Test pilot Marta Bohn-Meyer died last week in a crash of an aerobatic plane in Oklahoma.
Sadly ironic that she would die in a little single-engine prop plane after a career that included flying one of NASA's SR-71s at three times the speed of sound in high altitude tests at Dryden Flight Research Center in California.
RIP.
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August 16, 2005
I hope to get some decent images from the reports on the just-opened MAKS 2005 (the seventh annual International Aviation and Space Salon in Moscow).
Here are several articles to get up to speed on the events for the coming week.
Just one little pic so far -- the new MiG29OVT, the first twin engine jet fighter to employ multiaxis (versus 2D) thrust vectoring. At least according to this article, from which I grabbed the pic.

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July 10, 2005
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July 03, 2005
Part prop, part jet.
All badass.
The B-36 Peacemaker:
For an idea of just how frickin' big this plane was, check out this side-by-side photo, which makes the B-29 bomber look like a toy:
(Image found here).
Neat story describing the experience of a low flyover.
Loads of interesting history here. (Double-take: Nuclear propulsion testbed?)
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June 29, 2005
So far, it's just a prototype technology demonstrator, but it has already achieved a milestone for rotary-wing craft: a mu of 1 for the first time in history (achieved on June 17, 2005).
Yeah, I didn't have the faintest clue what that meant, either, but read more about it here and keep your eyes peeled for these very attractive rotorcraft.
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June 26, 2005
(Image from Stof's "Virtual Flying" Page).
If you read the linked pages above, you'll see why it's no accident that this plane resembles the German Me-109.
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June 19, 2005
The Me-262 Project is a private effort to create reproductions of this historic and beautiful aircraft. Interesting to me, much of the initial work was done in Fort Worth, Texas, just about an hour and a half southwest of here. Here's a picture of one of their creations in flight:
Update: The Country Pundit wrote a nice piece about this airplane, with more detail and history than I typically use in these kinds of posts.
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May 29, 2005
We start with the conventional, versatile cargo/transport airplane, the De Havilland DHC5 Buffalo. Here is a typical shot of the aircraft:
(Image from http://www.xdh.ca/DHC_Aircraft/DHC-5/dhc-5.html).
In the 1970s, NASA contracted with Boeing to modify the DHC5 to investigate new technologies for STOL aircraft.
Boeing rebuilt the plane with new avionics, new wings and tail, and a quartet of jet engines mounted above the wing to generate "upper surface blowing" in order to increase lift. The plane made its maiden flight at Boeing's Seattle plant in 1978, then flew to Ames for continued flight tests. The short takeoffs and quiet operations of the aircraft yielded much information for application in both civil and military design. One intriguing series of tests led to a successful landing and takeoff from an aircraft carrier-- the first four-engine jet plane to accomplish this feat.
The result was quite interesting:
C8A Buffalo Augmentor
Close-up of top-mounted jets
Takeoff
Full-sized, restricted, and watermarked photos available here.
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April 24, 2005
Here's a nice view of the 30mm gatling gun around which the rest of the plane is built:
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And a view of the plane in flight:
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April 17, 2005


Despite meeting all requirements, the plane never found a purchaser and remains a prototype. Find much more information about it at the Scaled Composites website.
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April 10, 2005
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Note the many wheels along the rear bottom of the plane, much like the Arado Ar 232:
To get an idea of just how big this plane is, take a look at how small the Russian Buran shuttle is in comparison:
The Buran is about the same size as the US Shuttle orbiter, which takes up quite a bit more space on the back of a Boeing 747.
(All images courtesy of Lockett Photography Card Catalog).
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April 05, 2005
I also found a mother lode of incredible early aircraft designs via the site.
Some examples in the extended entry:
more...
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