On the canopies of some of the newer fighters, there's a black outline above the pilots head. I can't find any pictures of this, but does anyone know what it's for?
In some birds, it's the detonation cord for blowing the canopy apart prior to ejecting. AV-8 Harriers have this, among others.
It is called Mild Detonating Cord (MDC), and it is basically a thermal charge coated in lead, used to shatter the plexiglass. In the T-45, it tended to spray molten lead all over folks during the ejection sequence......not good. From what I heard, they used the same cord from the Harrier, and it was extremely overpowered in the Hawk/Goshawk application. Either way, I much prefer jets with a canopy that seperates rather than shatters.
Taken to the extreme, while on this subject, is the Kamov Ka-50/52 Hokum. The helo has an ejection seat just like a fighter. When the pilot pulls the handles, the entire co-axial rotor system is jettisoned from the helicopter by explosive charges, followed by the canopy, followed by the seat.
From what I heard, they used the same cord from the Harrier, and it was extremely overpowered in the Hawk/Goshawk application. Either way, I much prefer jets with a canopy that seperates rather than shatters.
The AV-8 had to have the detcord canopy because the pilot might have to eject from a hover and/or slow airspeed.
Don't understand why the Hawk/Goshawk used it though?
Many seats have a "canopy breaker" on top to shatter the canopy if it doesn't come off.
The T-6A/B uses the MDC as well.
Forgot about that one......another gimpy canopy![]()
Exactly. At least in the manly A-6 Intruder, you ejected through the canopy with no det cord.![]()
The F-104 and U-2 have side-hinged canopies, and they jettison "in a traditional fashion".Goshawk/Hawk canopy is hinged on the the right side and manually operated, so there wasn't really the option of blowing it in a traditional fashion...
The F-104 and U-2 have side-hinged canopies, and they jettison "in a traditional fashion".
Goshawk/Hawk canopy is hinged on the the right side and manually operated, so there wasn't really the option of blowing it in a traditional fashion.
Taken to the extreme, while on this subject, is the Kamov Ka-50/52 Hokum. The helo has an ejection seat just like a fighter. When the pilot pulls the handles, the entire co-axial rotor system is jettisoned from the helicopter by explosive charges, followed by the canopy, followed by the seat.
I'd be curious to know how effective that actually is compared to one of traditional nature. Seems like one might get sliced and diced pretty quick even with the separation of the rotors
Taken to the extreme, while on this subject, is the Kamov Ka-50/52 Hokum.
The F-104 and U-2 have side-hinged canopies, and they jettison "in a traditional fashion".