I'm curious if his ejection seat was still active. The Hunters I fly with still have live seats in them so if they were that might mean he was trying to avoid traffic until the end.
I don't know what the showline was out there, and how it related to where the motorway was located, but once his nose was about 45 degrees nose low, he was committed either way. You can see the wings wobble as the jet is passing through the horizon, so he's in an accelerated stall/high AOA and pretty much just along for the ride at that point.
Reminds me of this one:
I don't know what the showline was out there, and how it related to where the motorway was located, but once his nose was about 45 degrees nose low, he was committed either way. You can see the wings wobble as the jet is passing through the horizon, so he's in an accelerated stall/high AOA and pretty much just along for the ride at that point.
Reminds me of this one:
Did the F-18 pilot survive?
Or the F-86 at El Toro too. Almost a carbon copy.
Also looks like he might have blacked out about a second before impact.
The instantaneous fireball and abrupt breakup of the airplane just shows what kind of energy he was carrying. Confused as to why he was doing acro with drops on board... Not saying the F-86 can't, but if I remember correctly on the F-18 they were pretty limiting.
Also looks like he might have blacked out about a second before impact.
I feel like I see a back pressure release.
Cadick had his fair share of luck. Flying a T-33, he chose to take his chances wheels up in a corn field rather than eject at 800 feet (I think the min was 1000). Later, he dead-sticked an A-4. He almost lost his wings over that. Instead of making a case for the soundness of his decision he made the case for prolonging his squadron's record for avoiding a hull loss.Yes, but with severe back injuries.