///AMG
Well-Known Member
He Bug’d out?
Yeah I guess literally
He Bug’d out?
I think my uncle was a back seater on the S-3 on that cruise.
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DRURB7FdsII&t=677s
I knew the father of the F-18 pilot, he was a former Navy A-7 pilot.If the jet was uncontrollable there is no argument to make for "sticking it out". I believe the F-18 in San Diego was uncontrollable and that was a tragedy.
If it is controllable, I think it's an open question. I think everyone thinks they'd be The Great Santini but when the rubber meets the road it would be a hell of a decision. If you decide to ride it down to be a hero - please, announce it on the radio - do it in your best Robert Mitchum "Beef, it's What's for Dinner" type voice. Say something really cool. Something intimating that ALL PILOTS, EVERYWHERE would act just as heroically. Because then it will go "viral". And everyone from Student Pilots up to ATP and everything in between will use that "wow! Pilots are cool!" vibe to bag split-tail. I mean....you're going to check out anyway - pay it forward on your way out.
I was told, before punching out he pointed the F-18 at an empty canyon. The force of the ejection pushed the nose down into the homes.
757/767 has a RAT. Ram Air Turbine that comes down with dual engine failure. Allows the flight control hydraulics to be pressurized with loss of both engines. I'm surprised fighter jets don't have this. I guess they figure you don't need it since you can always eject...haha. I'd trade my RAT for an ejection seat.
Yeah saw that. You know any details of the Alameda crash?
VA-304, A-6E 155594, Returning to NAS Alameda in April 1994. They had just come up initial for the break for RW 13 at Alameda, at the 180 for final, the jet descended and impacted the bay. No ejection by LCDR Rand McNally or LCDR Brian McMahon.
In (USN) carrier aviation, one of the legends is a guy by the name of "Bug" Roach. He's kind of The Godfather of the modern LSO. Worth a google, but a legendary dude nonetheless. If I recall the story correctly, he was out in an A-4 doing adversary stuff off the socal coast in the W291 complex in the early '90s when he had an engine failure. Ended up having to eject. Last thing anyone ever heard him say on the radio was "what a lousy day. Well I gotta get out of here, I'll see you guys". No chute was observed by his wingman, and he was never recovered. Cool as a cucumber until the end.
The formal "mixer" event during the annual Tailhook Association reuinion/convention, is named after him.
He had also prearranged and prepaid for a cocktail party at the o-club on the day of his death, should it ever happen. What a legend.
Back when the Miramar NAS O’Club rocked on Wednesday nights and was THE place to be.
I think 9/11 did in the practice of giving gate passes to young women (and future first wives)....
I think 9/11 did in the practice of giving gate passes to young women (and strippers)....
FFIFYI think 9/11 did in the practice of giving gate passes to young women (and future former first wives)....
Fixed it for you.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
No mandatory age 65?The check pilot at my part time gig was Miramar from 1975-83, then 87-90, F-14, F-4S, then F-14 again. Said it was an awesome time.
No mandatory age 65?
The check pilot at my part time gig was Miramar from 1975-83, then 87-90, F-14, F-4S, then F-14 again. Said it was an awesome time.
I assume active component Tomcats the first time, then to the reserves for F-4 and eventually F-14 again? What an awesome ride he had. Like I've said, I would have given my left nut to even do a tour in the Intruder. And similarly, I'd have given my right nut too, to have a tour in either the Phantom or Tomcat. I was a Top Gun baby, and that jet (and later the A-6) were all I wanted to fly. Ironically, I remember not even thinking the Hornet was cool at all. A bit more than a couple thousand hours in every variant and production lot built, and now 30+ years later, I guess I was wrong
Complete side tangent, didn't NAS Dallas have a reserve Tomcat squadron or two towards the end of the old reserve hardware days? Or were they only NKX?
I assume active component Tomcats the first time, then to the reserves for F-4 and eventually F-14 again? What an awesome ride he had. Like I've said, I would have given my left nut to even do a tour in the Intruder. And similarly, I'd have given my right nut too, to have a tour in either the Phantom or Tomcat. I was a Top Gun baby, and that jet (and later the A-6) were all I wanted to fly. Ironically, I remember not even thinking the Hornet was cool at all. A bit more than a couple thousand hours in every variant and production lot built, and now 30+ years later, I guess I was wrong
Complete side tangent, didn't NAS Dallas have a reserve Tomcat squadron or two towards the end of the old reserve hardware days? Or were they only NKX?