We usually called them bug smashers, until I accidentally said it with with a hot mike. LOL
Image Unavailable, Please Login Retired USAF F-16 pilot, current airline pilot. Pic from my younger days before I could afford a Ferrari....
I am a Ferrari car lover who expect to buy a complete Ferrari car like 458 or California one day , These should be based on enough money that i should have . Also having been in composites for many years , I am able to build carbon fiber Parts for race car or modified cars
Image Unavailable, Please Login I'm a little bit slow in posting, I guess. This was 75 years ago. Don't know who that is.Nothing to brag about, just keep running into old stuff whilst clearing out boxes.
Nice photo, Bob! Of course, you need no introduction here, as you are the heart and soul of this forum.
I don't know about that, Jim. I have the reputation of a blabbermouth and I guess old goats sometimes blatt and blab too much. I like to spread stuff around instead of sitting on the couch and reminiscing. It's fun to share with other goats, old and young and I'm not trying to be anything special 'cause I ain't.
Hey guys..I'm another one from FChat. I'm fortunate enough to have '79 308GTB and an '84 BBi. I've had them for a long, long time seems like, but enjoy them very much......you know throwing money at them! I retired from American off the 777 about two years ago and boy did it come quick! I started back in 71 when I took my PP written in High School. I enlisted in the Arizona Air National Guard in '71 in Tucson, and while doing my training as an electrician at Davis Monthan AFB there, I started my PP training with the aero club. $10 an hour for the plane and instructor wet...yikes! Graduated from Arizona State and was able to find a flying slot with the AF Reserves at March AFB in Riverside, CA flying HC-130's in Rescue. My Dad had been at March in '41, my brother in '71 so it was kinda neat to be going there. Did my AF UPT at Willy in Chandler, AZ in T-37's and T-38's. First airline was Pacific Express flying BAC-111's in California...before they went bankrupt :-(, then I got on with Eastern in Miami...lots of fun until I went on strike but I was fortunate to get hired by AA in'89 and never looked back. I met a lot of interesting people along the way, made life long friends, had some great times, went all over the world, and in those 40 plus years of flying only shut down one engine...but still had three turning Cheers
Oh OK.......I was in Tucson at the 162nd back in the '70's when they had F-100's. I know they have "covered parking" for the planes now and that's what made me wonder. I've only been in and out of Luke in a T-38, 130, and 141. Nice Corvette by the way!
Cool shot. Any of you Viper guys have Dodge Vipers? Sorry I had to ask. I love seeing the F16s fly all over town in Tucson. The A10s are cool, too, but the F16s really make me smile.
Not too many. However they used to bring the Viper club out at the air shows, and they would drag race a Viper vs F-16 on the runway. Have not seen them do that in a while though.
How about Ford Falcons??? You could get big motors in them, too... How did the F-16 'Fighting Falcon' get the nickname 'Viper'
I think some saw a resemblance to the starfighters called Vipers in the original Battlestar Galactica movie.
Retired AH-64A driver. Two years OEF. Left a great airline to fly corporate jet. Nothing at all against the airline world. It just wasn’t for me. Cheers. Image Unavailable, Please Login
Hey gang, I’m currently flying on the airline side of things and am reinstating my CFI next week since I let it lapse, oh....20+ years ago...and will be buying a 310 sometime soon for some fun flying! Love this section! Lots of cool planes you’s guys have. Seems like around my area (Southwest of Ft. Worth / DFW) the hardest part of plane ownership is finding a darn hangar! Great thread... Cheers Dave
quite a few years ago when I was going to get relocated to the fort Worth area, I almost bought a place at hidden valley airpark just north of fort Worth. my employer changed their mind, and sent me out to the desert but, it looked like a pretty cool place for aviation lovers
Reinstating the CFI is fun, isn't it? I plan to never let mine expire from now on... I treated my CFI reinstatement ride exactly as an initial CFI checkride, and that's basically how the DPE approached it as well. There are a few things you don't need to do on a reinstatement, but otherwise it's the same. I told her that I had a really hard time with 8s on pylons, and she said no problem, we won't do that... and then she said "when did you get your commercial?" "1986" "There's your problem- they didn't teach 8s on pylons in the 1980s!"
I hope that I'm not loosing it a bit at 94 but when I got my check ride I remember doing two "eights' maneuvers. One was eights on pylon and one was pylon eights. The latter was with one pylon that you had to cross after doing a180 deg turn at either end. I had to do it with a cross wind 90 deg to the line that crossed the pylon between the turn points of the eights. Then I had to do the eights on pylons the same way. I got a "forced landing" in the middle of that one and came within feet of putting it down in a plowed field nearby that had the wind on the nose. Got chewed out because the furrows were in the wrong direction, crossing the field instead of being aligned with it. On that ride I got 720's left and 720's right, precision spins left and right coming out on a point after 2 turns, 1 1/2, and 1 left and right . Three or four rudder exercise stalls (stick in the gut and climb power until the nose drops and walk it down with rudder) without loss of direction control that would develop into a spin. " Gliding stalls" in a turn, climbing stalls in a turn, and a finish with three precision landings ( no power adjustments after throttle had been pulled back) and hitting the numbers within 50 feet.. It was a hot day and I was wringing wet when I was done. The last landing was a disaster when the bottom dropped out from a 180 deg wind shift. A black squall was approaching the other end of the runway and had to walk the airplane down with rudder and we hit like a garbage can falling off of a truck. I passed but got criticized for veering off into the grass shoulder. This for my PPL in 1946.
Bob- The one time they tried to spin the F-111, they lost the aircraft, but got to test the capsule ejection system.