Sunday, March 19, 2023

Jump Jets

 


9 comments:

  1. At MCAS Cherry Point, these were referred to as North Carolina lawn darts

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  2. The Argentines had a slightly different view.

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  3. It had nothing to do with their battle effectiveness. The base was near the coast, which was rich with various forms of waterfowl. Every once in a while one would get sucked into the planes single engine and well, you know what happens next. The plane becomes a lawn dart.

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  4. on the farm in NC if you waggle your arms, they waggle back.

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  5. Many years ago I was able to get up close to a Harrier while working communications for an airshow. Believe me, you didn't want to to be anywhere near it when it fired up. The vertical maneuvers portion of the show required a very large area clear of any people or debris for safety reasons. It was a good thing that the runway was extra heavy duty originally made for large bombers. It was a former SAC B-52 base. The Harriers had a reputation for destroying runway surfaces with the downward directed exhaust.

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  6. The Marines still have a couple of squadrons flying them, according to Wikipedia.

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    1. The English were working on a supersonic version when their politicians killed it, like most all their high-tech war gear.

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  7. The Harrier was an idea so dumb that it was brilliant - if you're skilled enough to hold one in motionless hover. Lots of men have washed out of that training. An armored tub for the pilot is very popular with the the pilots. Then it's just a question of "Will it hold enough fuel to get you there and back to this ship at 0400?"

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  8. I'm pretty sure that the soon-to-be-replaced USMC Commandant shit canned the Harrier.

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