auw2fly
Goldmember
If you've never been there, it's quite accurate actually.Really, they couldn't have changed Rapid City's identifier?
If you've never been there, it's quite accurate actually.Really, they couldn't have changed Rapid City's identifier?
If you've never been there, it's quite accurate actually.
Yeah, the helmet picture was too dark....I doubt they are planning on flying that thing not wearing helmets...
I doubt they are planning on flying that thing not wearing helmets...
Maintenance would be my guess.
That former crew chief student of mine said headsets aren't even allowed in the aircraft for flight crew, so as to prevent any temptation to not wear a helmet. He said after 8'ish hours you'd do anything to get the helmet off.
I had a professor that was a B-52 Nav.... He used to tell us about how safe he felt sitting in his downward ejection seat while doing low-level exercises.One of my flight students is a retired B52 crew chief. As I understand it (and I might have this wrong), everyone but the chief has ejection seats. He's supposed to be the last guy out and he's supposed to fall through an opening in the floor and do a tuck and roll maneuver, basically he said it's highly unlikely the chief will make it out alive.
I guess it doubles as a Bose ad....
Ive always liked this B-1 cockpit photo. Do they have ejection seats for the guys in back?
One of my flight students is a retired B52 crew chief. As I understand it (and I might have this wrong), everyone but the chief has ejection seats. He's supposed to be the last guy out and he's supposed to fall through an opening in the floor and do a tuck and roll maneuver, basically he said it's highly unlikely the chief will make it out alive.
Maintenance would be my guess.
That former crew chief student of mine said headsets aren't even allowed in the aircraft for flight crew, so as to prevent any temptation to not wear a helmet. He said after 8'ish hours you'd do anything to get the helmet off.
Either way, I'd bet they're doing preflight. No reason to wear a helmet at that particular base in SW Asia when it's 125 degrees and 100% humidity outside.
I had a professor that was a B-52 Nav.... He used to tell us about how safe he felt sitting in his downward ejection seat while doing low-level exercises.
He was a funny dude.
The way he described it to me, he said the different crew positions ejected in a staggered order, then the aircraft had to be in a specific pitch attitude and airspeed in order to make a successful jump out the hatch. He described it as a pretty narrow envelope, and why he never really believed it would be a realistic option.Following an accident in La Junta, CO, where the two jumpseaters rode the plane in to a fatal ending; the jumpseats werent' used anymore.
Yeah, and I wore my flak vest and survival vest on every combat mission I flew, because the rules said I had to.
...No reason to wear a helmet at that particular base in SW Asia when it's 125 degrees and 100% humidity outside.
One of my flight students is a retired B52 crew chief. As I understand it (and I might have this wrong), everyone but the chief has ejection seats. He's supposed to be the last guy out and he's supposed to fall through an opening in the floor and do a tuck and roll maneuver, basically he said it's highly unlikely the chief will make it out alive.
Montana reporting in. Here's a link to my hometown paper that includes eyewitness accounts and some photos of the incident.
http://billingsgazette.com/news/sta...cle_ae05c864-4364-5b36-adb4-5dce07ffdd23.html