Terminal Velocity

Terminal Velocity

It takes about 12 seconds for the human body to reach terminal velocity.  At that speed they will see the earth’s surface approach them at 177 feet or 54 meters every second.  These are the stories of a few survivors who have fallen from an aircraft, without opening a parachute… and survived!

 

The remarkable Juliane Koepcke

 

Nicholas Alkemade

 

RAF Lancasters

 

The Ju88 nightfighter

 

 

The Il-4

 

B17 Flying Fortress bombers on a mission over Europe

 

The B17 ball turret

 

Vesna Vulović and a JAT DC9

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the RAF, SDASM, IWM and clipperarctic.  Other images are in the Public Domain or considered Fair Use.

The Kupang Kid

The Kupang Kid

The landing gear, or undercarriage, of a big airliner is a massive and powerful system. In modern times stowaways, have frequently attempted to hide within the undercarriage wheel-wells of airliners. The chances of surviving such an ordeal are remote in the extreme as the hazards are many. If someone attempting such a dangerous journey isn’t crushed by the movement of the gear as it stows or fall to their death when the undercarriage doors open to raise or lower the gear, then the environment will present an almost insurmountable hazard. Some, however, still survive!

The landing gear of a B747

 

The forces that the undercarriage assembly is subjected to are considerable

 

The landing gear assembly and doors of a B747

 

FAA guidance on times of useful consciousness

 

Stranded near Newfoundland in the ice

 

A Douglas DC8

 

The DC10

 

Japanese troops in Timor

 

A 1950’s airport similar to Kupang

 

A Netherlands Air Force C47

 

Darwin Hospital

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Adrian Pingstone, Faisal Akram, Alf van Beem, Australian War Memorial, Fotoafdrukken Koninklijke Luchtmacht and kenhodge13.

The Hover Cushion Glide Air Vehicle Thing

The Hover Cushion Glide Air Vehicle Thing

The Hovercraft is something of a rare beast. This story examines the many engineers and scientists who contributed to the development of a vehicle that is lifted on a cushion of air and is capable of travelling over land, water, mud, ice, tarmac, sand and many other flattish surfaces.

 

The Swedish scientist Emanuel Swedenborg is known to have sketched the first hovercraft design in 1714.

Dagobert Müller von Thomamühl’s Luftkissengleitboot, a surface effect boat.

 

How a hovercraft functions.

 

Ford’s efforts at hovering cars.

 

The L1 hovering tank.

 

Charles Fletcher’s Glidemobile.

 

Cockerell’s hovercraft patent.

 

Sir Christopher Sydney Cockerell.

 

 

SRN1.

 

SRN4.

 

The US Navy LCAC.

 

The Soviet Zubr class ACV, the biggest in the world weighing in at 555 tons.

 

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to those in the Public Domain, Technical Museum Vienna, Messer Woland, the Ford Motor Company, Ad Meskens, GB Patent Office, The National Archives UK, USN, Andrew Berridge and Mil.Ru (LightZone).

 

The Horsehead Gang

The Horsehead Gang

Out of the gloom of thick cloud, through their windscreens, the pilots suddenly saw the tops of pine trees but it was too late to pull up. They ploughed through them as the branches smashed into the left wing shattering the navigation light. One of the passengers onboard was the President of the airline, Captain Eddie Rickenbacker… this is his story.

An Eastern Airlines DC3

 

Atlanta had poor weather and it was close to midnight when the aircraft crashed

 

Eddie Rickenbacker

 

The findings of the inquiry

 

Racing in San Francisco

 

Rickenbacker becomes CO of the 94th, the Hat in the Ring gang

 

After receiving many decorations, Rickenbacker returns to the US a hero

 

The Rickenbacker motor company

 

Rickenbacker survives a second crash, this time in a Boeing B-17

 

Capt. E.V. “Eddie” Rickenbacker wearing the Congressional Medal of Honor

 

Images published under Creative Commons Licence with thanks to Jack Delano, the Library of Congress, CAB, SF Public Library, NARA, Rickenbacker Motors, the USAFand the USAAF.

Flying the Red Flag, Part III

Flying the Red Flag, Part III

This is the final part of the Red Flag tales which carries on directly from Part II where we heard some exploits from participants of Exercise Red Flag. If you haven’t listened to the previous taleson this subject, it would be worth going back them.  My thanks to Jaguar Pilot Nij, Tornado pilot Gasher, Tomcat RIO Scott and RAAF F111 Nav Abs.

 

 

 

 

 

The E-3 Sentry AWACS.

 

Break Right Chuck, there’s one in your 6 o’clock!

 

A Smokey SAM.

 

Live weapons being dropped during Red Flag.

 

A Tornado drops flares.

 

An RAAF F111 puts its wings back and goes!

 

The Jaguar pilot’s favourite dance.

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the USAF, Photo-Concepte.de, the RAF, the USN,