Rhumbas and Quarrels

Rhumbas and Quarrels

On the last tale, Sidewinders and Sparrows we talked a little about the history of rockets and missiles but it’s a big subject so this week I thought I’d expand on the theme a little and as I’m going to mention lots of rattlesnakes and sparrows, I should probably use the correct collective nouns… rhumbas and quarrels!

 

Rules of Engagement

 

JTIDS

 

The result of a Blue on Blue engagement

 

An AIM 54 Phoenix launch

 

An AIM7 Sparrow in flight

 

The APG63 radar

 

Radar discrimination

 

 

AIM7 Sparrow missiles on an F15 Eagle

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the USAF, USN, Daderot and the DOD Media.

Sidewinders and Sparrows

Sidewinders and Sparrows

Despite their obvious differences, Sidewinders and Sparrows often went together because they aren’t just the names of flying creatures and slithering serpents… they are weapons of war.

 

The Sidewinder

 

House Sparrows

 

The Rapier missile system

 

Chinese Fire Arrows

 

The Tipu Sultan’s artillery rockets

 

The RS-28 rockets fired by the Polikarpov I-16

 

The German R4M unguided air to air rocket

 

The nuclear AIR-2 Genie missile

 

A Genie launch

 

The AIM9 Sidewinder

 

The rotating reticule

 

The rolleron

 

Guidance

 

The warhead

 

An AIM 9 warhead effect demonstration

 

The AIM7 Sparrow

 

A QF4B killed by a Sparrow missile

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to images in the Public Domain, UK Defence Imagery, Wubei Zhi, NASA, Juergen Schiffmann, the USAF, David Monniaux, RoyKabanlit, U.S. Navy National Museum of Naval Aviation and the USN.

 

Flight 574 and the Banning of Indonesia

Flight 574 and the Banning of Indonesia

It was New Year’s Day, 2007 and the 96 passengers booked on Adam Air Flight 574 from Java to Sulawesi boarded their Boeing 737-4Q8 for their 2 hour trip. The Indonesian government had adopted a policy of deregulation in the country’s aviation industry which had resulted in a boom of start-up airlines, many of which were low cost carriers. This decision wasn’t matched with an equivalent ramp up of government supervision and control… the result was fierce commercial competition amongst the new airlines with little or no oversight.

 

Competition amongst the many start up low cost airlines was fierce.

 

The incident Adam Air Boeing 737, ready for boarding.

 

An Adam Air B737 taxies out.

 

Debris from the flight is washed up.

 

The USN ship Mary Sears.

 

Adam Air flight 172.

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to FLasset for logo, marlborotosca, Dmitriy Pichugin. the NTSB, the USN, the NTSC and ERRORHUNT.

RAF Form 414, Volume 13

RAF Form 414, Volume 13

Another installment of tales from my RAF logbook. I’m about halfway through my 4 year sentence at RAF Valley instructing those RAF pilots destined for the fast jet world. The first couple of years had been far from without incident and I should probably mention that I nearly lost my greatest friend to an accident but someone was watching over him that day and he survived.

 

Our great friend, Glen, a USAF exchange pilot.

 

Flying in the Hawk

 

The laying on of hands by Central Flying School

 

The Hawk T1 trainer

 

The horrible Spinning explanation

 

The laziest A1 QFI in existence

How it Starts

How it Starts

How do you get a pilot going? Well, in the old days it started with a hand crank!

 

The Hucks Starter

 

… Cowboy Land!

 

The Coffman Starter

 

A cartridge starter on the RB-57A

 

The DHC1 Chipmunk

 

The Arnold Benz Velo

 

The cycle of a jet engine

 

RN Seahawks simultaneous use of their cartridge starters

 

RAF Lightnings of No56 “Chicken in the Basket” Sqn at RAF Akrotiri

 

The SR71 Blackbird

 

The Riedelanlasser starter for German BMW 003 and Jumo 004 turbojet engines

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the Library of Congress, Jeff Dahl, NACA, US Patent Office, bomberpilot, Jeff Dahl, the IMW, the RAF, the USAF and Kogo. Attribution not possible for some images.

Flying Over Christmas

Flying Over Christmas

Waiting for the arrival of the December flying roster was always a tense time. Those with big family gatherings are anxious to ensure they are at home with their loved ones whilst the more carefree crew, with fewer ties, might want to be down route somewhere exotic knowing that a bevy of party goers would be flying with them. I know of one crew who flew over Christmas with great excitement… at least I believe so! Their names were Frank Borman, James Lovell and William Anders, the crew of the Apollo 8 space mission.

Saturnalia

 

Victorian Christmas

 

Father Christmas

 

The Apollo 8 Crew

 

The Zond 5 spacecraft

 

The emblem and launch of Apollo 8

 

Stage 3 jettison

 

The surface of the moon

 

Earthrise

 

A safe return

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Antoine-François Callet, Joseph Lionel Williams, Robert Seymour, Josiah King, Alfred Henry Forrester, the USSR Post and NASA.