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Thread: Like Low Flying? Try these for size..

  1. #11
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    Amazing the contrast in speed of that low jet. From the pilot's perspective it looks quite slow and controlled. But from the guys on the ground, they barley have time to jump.
    Love the way when he pulls up it says MAX G on the screen.

    Been lucky enough to see two F1-11's sneak around the head land at Stradbroke Island, so low, slow, and close I though I could almost touch them.
    Then the same thing happened on Spicers Peak above Cunninghams Gap. The boys doing a low slow fly along the The Great Divide west of Brisbane. Thought I almost made eye contact they were so close. Just amazing when there so big and real.
    Jason

    2010 130 TDCi

  2. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bushie View Post
    Great clip of a low flying spitfire, but unfortunately will get deleted if I post

    search "low flying spitfire reporter" on youtube


    Martyn
    Bushie, one day soon, and perhaps if the edgits ever pass through Brisbane on a tour somewhere, I'll have to take you up to the in-laws.
    The old boy is mounting two RR motors on trailers. One a Merlin Mrk 11 (the motor that won the war so to speak) and a Griffin 6 I think. Both Spitfire donks, and both are huge.

    When his finished I reckon it would be a good day with the yard full of Landies all watching these things rev up. Maybe an unofficial Defender Day type thing.
    Jason

    2010 130 TDCi

  3. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by newhue View Post

    When his finished I reckon it would be a good day with the yard full of Landies all watching these things rev up. Maybe an unofficial Defender Day type thing.
    The Defender day would be watching a Hurricane fire up. Spitfire engines? definitely more a Discovery day, Bob
    I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food

    A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking

  4. #14
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    Not at all, Old Chap. - More suited to the RRC crowd, as a goodly proportion of Fighter pilots were, shall we say of a mature vintage and from the 'Right' Families (at the start of the flap...)

    I read somewhere that a board member of BP was in Spitfires...

  5. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by superquag View Post
    Not at all, Old Chap. - More suited to the RRC crowd, as a goodly proportion of Fighter pilots were, shall we say of a mature vintage and from the 'Right' Families (at the start of the flap...)

    I read somewhere that a board member of BP was in Spitfires...
    Sometimes the passage of time, blurs the facts. Most of the pilots were under 20 years old, most older men did not have the reflexes to handle modern air warfare, at that time. Perhaps most didn't have a vehicle to drive, but I would like to think if they did, it was fast little sporty model, Bob




    Who Were The Few

    Who Were The Few


    Who Were “The Few”?
    “Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few” said Prime Minister Winston Churchill in a speech to Parliament on 20th August 1940 as the Battle of Britain raged overhead.
    It was not long before the press and radio of the day seized on the epithet as the collective noun for the RAF’s Fighter Command pilots and others who were struggling against almost insurmountable odds to claim victory over Germany’s Luftwaffe.
    In order to launch Operation “Sealion”, Hitler’s planned invasion of Britain across the English Channel that would remove the last democratic obstacle to his domination of Europe, he had to destroy the RAF’s ability to attack his forces. Conquering or subduing Britain would also prevent the re-supply of Russia, his next intended target.
    The average member of the British public in the Spring of 1940 probably thought of the typical RAF pilot as carefree, out for a good time, doing a bit of flying within a club setting and able to impress the ladies on a Saturday night with the lads.
    In reality nothing was further from the truth, but as the Fleet Street adage goes: “never let the facts get in the way of a good story”. Wartime flying, piloting a 350 mph fighter daily to within an inch of your life, was in fact a deadly serious business requiring a cool head and a steady, calculating nerve. Only a fool would treat it casually as, if he did, he would soon be bounced by an Me 109 and become another name on a war memorial.
    The average age of an RAF pilot in 1940 was about 20 years. Some were as young as 18 and there were others over 30. In those days, with the age of majority set at 21, many of the RAF’s Battle of Britain pilots were not old enough to vote but not too young to lay down their lives in the face of a life and death struggle to save Britain from coming under the tyranny of the Nazis.
    Not all were British – in fact Fighter Command was a cosmopolitan mix. There were Poles (141), Czechs (87), Belgians (24) and Free French (13) who swelled the ranks along with those from the British Commonwealth and other nations who answered the call for pilots wanting to defend freedom.
    Roughly two-thirds of the 3,000 or so RAF pilots who flew in the Battle of Britain were officers, the other third being sergeant and flight sergeant pilots.
    In 1940 a pilot officer could expect to earn £264 per annum, roughly equivalent to just over £30,000 in today’s money, and non-commissioned officers quite a bit less, despite facing the same dangers: both received an allowance (flying pay) recognising their aircrew status. In addition their numbers were beefed up with pilots from the Auxiliary Air Force (AAF) – made up those from the largely middle and upper classes who trained at weekend (hence they earned the nickname “weekend warriors”), who provided a civilian pool of extra capability during emergencies.
    One fighter squadron – 601 (County of London) Sqn was known as the “Millionaires’ mob” because it was formed by a group of wealthy aristocrats. But on the outbreak of war the AAF was subsumed into the RAF and its squadrons became normal frontline squadrons.
    Other sources of manpower were the University Air Squadrons (UASs), created to attract young talent to the Service, and the Volunteer Reserve (RAFVR).

    Outnumbered 5 to 1 by both machine and men, RAF pilots had radar and one significant other advantage over the Germans – they were defending their homeland. If a pilot crashed or baled out over land he was likely to be over friendly territory. It was an altogether different story for a German pilot. Once they had left the shores of northern Europe they were in hostile skies for nearly the rest of the sortie. During engagements they could easily run short of fuel since no German aircraft in 1940 had been designed with long range operations in mind.
    The cost of the Battle was high – of the nearly 3,000 aircrew who fought in the Battle of Britain 544 lost their lives and of the remainder a further 814 died before the end of the War. The Battle of Britain Monument on the Victoria Embankment, London, records the names of the 2,936 flyers from the 15 nations who flew for Britain in the Battle.
    Said Winston Churchill: "The gratitude of every home in our island, in our Empire and indeed throughout the world, except in the abodes of the guilty, goes out to the British airmen, who, undaunted by odds, unwearied in their constant challenge and mortal danger, are turning the tide of the world war by their prowess and devotion.
    "Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few."
    Today about 125 aircrew who flew in the Battle are alive and scattered around the globe. Most are members of the Battle of Britain Fighter Association
    I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food

    A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking

  6. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by bob10 View Post
    The Defender day would be watching a Hurricane fire up. Spitfire engines? definitely more a Discovery day, Bob
    Quote Originally Posted by superquag View Post
    Not at all, Old Chap. - More suited to the RRC crowd, as a goodly proportion of Fighter pilots were, shall we say of a mature vintage and from the 'Right' Families (at the start of the flap...)

    I read somewhere that a board member of BP was in Spitfires...
    Na, I reckon your both are wrong. A Defer is as classie as a Spitfire, afterall they are both full of rivits. But is also just deserving in the workshop next the motor, as they probably need fixing.
    The RR's and Discos can have high tea whetever the want.
    Jason

    2010 130 TDCi

  7. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by newhue View Post
    ...The old boy is mounting two RR motors on trailers. One a Merlin Mrk 11 (the motor that won the war so to speak) and a Griffin 6 I think. ...
    Merlin 2 or Merlin XI? I didn't think the Merlin "eleven" went into production

    The 1030 hp Merlin II (2) was the first production Merlin engine in 1937 (Hurricane Mk/Spitfire MkI), but was superseded by 1310 hp the Merlin III (3) in 1938 (Hurricane Mk/Spitfire MkI) and subsequently by 1150 hp Merlin XII (12) in Spitfire MkII from 1939.

    So while it may have been the Merlin engine which won the battle of Britain it was the Merlin II, Merlin III and Merlin XII combined.

    BTW the De Havilland DH.98 "Mosquito" used the 1233 hp Merlin 76/77.

    You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.

  8. #18
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    http://homepage.ntlworld.com/petert....anCanberra.jpg

    Just the link I'm afraid, but an interesting shot of a Rhodesian Airforce Canberra bomber flying through an aircraft hanger.

  9. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Firefish View Post
    Just the link I'm afraid ...
    Here's your pic mate. That's guys crazy and I don't just mean the pilot.

    2024 RRS on the road
    2011 D4 3.0 in the drive way
    1999 D2 V8, in heaven
    1984 RRC, in hell

  10. #20
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    Thanks for that
    Given how few aircraft the Rhodies had, with sanctions and a bush war and all, you'd think they would have been a little more circumspect about such antics.

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