Don’t Upset the Jet 2

Don’t Upset the Jet 2

Last week we chatted about historic incidents that led to aircraft upsets. This week we talk to a newly qualified airline pilot who is undergoing advanced Upset and Recovery Training at a British training school. We also speak to the school’s chief pilot and one of the instructors, an ex Mig 29 pilot.

 

Basem undergoing upset training at BAA in a Grob

 

 

One of the BAA’s Extras

 

Basem off to be turned upside down!

 

Adrian… Basem’s ex Mig 29 instructor

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Capt Nick Anderson

Don’t Upset the Jet 1

Don’t Upset the Jet 1

With the arrival of jet powered airliners, commercial pilots entered a new world of high altitude flying in large swept wing aircraft at velocities approaching the speed of sound. They were often unprepared for the challenge and before long unexpected and unexplained loss of control events began to worry the world of aviation. These events initially occurred when an aircraft was upset from its normal benign straight and level environment and ended up in a high speed dive, something that was rare in the earlier days of straight winged, piston powered airliners. Hence, they became known as Jet Upsets.

Coffin Corner!

 

Upsets involve extreme attitudes

 

Less than perfect cockpit design often contributes to upsets

 

A Pan Am B707

 

 

 

China Airlines A300

 

The tragic result of the China Airlines upset

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Boeing Company, Geni, the NTSB/CAB, Guido Allieri and the JTSB.

Giants of Ukraine

Giants of Ukraine

In the world of Slavic folk tales there are giants in Ukraine but as aviators the ones we are interested are the giants that the fabled aircraft designer Oleg Antonov designed. This is his story.

The OKA1 glider

 

Antonov at the Leningrad Polytechnic

 

The OKA38 Stork

 

The An-2

 

The An-12 Cub

 

The An-24 Coke

 

The vast An-22 Cock

 

The huge An-124 Condor

 

The flight deck of the An-124

 

The mighty Mryia, An-225, carrying a Buran project space shuttle

 

The destruction of a dream, the Mryia was a victim of the Russian invaders who recently attacked Ukraine

 

Oleg Antonov

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the Antonov Design Bureau, the Leningrad Polytechnic Institute, the Central Design Bureau for Gliders, Arpingstone, Igor Dvurekov, Dmitriy Pichugin, Toshi Aoki, Yevgeny Pashnin, Vasiliy Kob and Дизайнер: А.Безменов.

 

RAF Form 414, Vol 14

RAF Form 414, Vol 14

It’s logbook time again and you may recall that I was as freshly a minted A1 QFI as there could be and I had just left the training world to return to the front line on my old Squadron, the Fighting Cocks. I had been in Wales for
over 4 years and in that time the faces I knew on 43 Sqn had almost all gone… it was like I was joining a unit of strangers.

 

The Q Shed

 

Additional armed aircraft ready to go onto QRA

 

The F4 tank limiting speeds

 

A Soviet Badger trying to sneak past at low level

 

An F4 tanking from a converted Victor V Bomber

 

Decimomannu Air Base

 

How the ACMI Air Combat Manoeuvering Instrumentation worked

 

The Men of Harlech near Llanbedr

 

The Jindavik target drone

 

A frame from the Jindavik cameras showing a Sidewinder about to impact the towed flare target

 

My new navigator, Coolhand

 

A 43(F) Sqn Phantom

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the RAF, the USAF, RuthAS and Mike Freer.

Friedrich Karl von Koenig-Warthausen and the Crazy Baron!

Friedrich Karl von Koenig-Warthausen and the Crazy Baron!

It was a grand sight to see another German aircraft there, a Junkers W33 with its distinctive corrugated metal skin and stylish enclosed cockpit, a far cry from his own flimsy machine. The German pilots greeted each other and marvelled at how, in 1928, they should have met in such a remote place… some 3,300 miles, 5,300 km, from the Fatherland. It is doubtful that the Junkers pilot knew much about the young 22 year old airman with his flimsy little aircraft, but the gaunt and weathered Baron was well known to von Koenig-Warthausen!

The Junkers W33

 

Ehrenfried Günther Freiherr von Hünefeld

 

Alcock and Brown preparing for their transatlantic flight

 

Posing in front of the W33 named Bremen

 

The Bremen damaged but safely across the Atlantic

 

The flimsy, lightweight Klemm L20B

 

The Klemm airborne

 

Baron Freidrich Carl von König-Warthausen

 

The Baron renamed his aircraft after his countryman Hünefeld

 

Images under a Creative Commons licence with thanks to Monika Hoerath, Tomas Mellies, MIKAN, The Bundesarchiv, Edward N. Jackson, L’Aéronautique magazine, John Underwood plus images in the Public Domain.