JETMAN GLIDER

I’ve always said that as soon as they start selling the Jetman jet powered gliders I’ll be first in to buy one.  This video of one without the jet engines attached is intriguing.  They claim that it’s twice as efficient as the latest birdman suits and that’s tempting but I’m sure that it’s a LOT more expensive and quite a hassle finding an aircraft with the room to take you to altitude.  And once you deploy the parachute it would be a huge amount of drag which would make the canopy ride boring and slow.  With my birdman suit I can get into any skydiving plane, make a jump, land back in front of the building and walk back inside easily.  I guess I’ll have to wait and see how much they go for.

Your Weekly Lex, For Strength

Mugger on CAP

By lex, on September 18th, 2006

Mugger was his name, or his callsign anyway – or very nearly, names having been minimally altered to prevent being placed on somebody’s “People to Kill” list, just in case. He was a drag-knuckle F-14 fighter pilot of the ould mould, flight suit zipped down to his navel, chest thrust pugnaciously out, boots unshined and often even untied, their tongues poking out like labrador puppies from under his pants legs and himself generally displaying but a faint relationship to what was commonly conceived to be a proper and military kind of personal appearance. (I think he was an AOCS graduate.) Never to fret though, for Mugger was thoroughly convinced of his own excellence, implacably certain of himself from tip to top and from long established custom needing little more than a mirror and a little privacy to break down his gruff exterior and have him making soft, cooing noises of appreciation.

Unpredictable he was too, whether that’d be behind the boat, accustomed as he was to throwing slippery madness at the LSO platform in the fond (and often vain) hope that we’d take him aboard regardless, with none of your “eat a joes” lights a-flashing in his beady little eyes for to send him round for another go.

Not entirely ungifted as a fighter pilot though: Distinctly do I recollect that one fine day south of Sunni Pakistan, a place where the ship I had the honor to serve aboard was about to spend four days sampling the very modest, not to say uncertain, pleasures of Karachi liberty two days on:

Consulting their whimsy more perhaps than their geography, Mugger and his wingman shot off, cleaned up, and pooted up to the hazy north, in the general direction of our incipient port visit, of which the less we say perhaps the better. The mission they were fragged for had them run at each other in slow-motion like, a-hanging on the blades at max conserve airspeed over the course of a 1+30 cycle. Mostly they were saving gas for the end, the better for to hack and claw at one another in full grunt for that lovely, crowded moment before it was time once again to tip it the timely and head back to Mother, that sour-faced harridan, always looking at her watch and tapping her feet impatiently should ever you lose track of the moment, occupied in your own devices or the pleasures of the instant and coming home a moment late, God forbid and she’d have your head for it.

East and west they’d split once fairly north of the old battle ax herself, and a couple of leisurely, langorous runs they’d had of it too, their RIOs busily doing that RIO-shit in the back, while the pilots themselves tried to stay awake by humming paeans to their own perfection, as was the F-14 pilots’ favorite sport in moments of distraction and ennui.

Not content with merely being gifted, Mugger was also widely recognized – celebrated even, among his peers – as a cheating bastard, upon whom it was always wise to keep an eye. Out. For. So it didn’t much surprise the wingie on his hot turn for the next run when his RO picked up a contact twenty degrees right of the nose, which nothing wrong with that but at ten miles rather than the prescribed forty or so. “Aha,” said LT Perspicacious to himself, “That cork-sticking gasper is trying to sneak up behind me and trail me to the merge, so he is, but watch what I do next.”

continued:

I Stand Corrected

A few days ago I wrote post about my decision to buy a Spot Tracker GPS locating device.   I was as giddy as a school girl with my new toy.  Over the last two years I’ve had a spot racker with me on all most of my ferry flights because either my co-pilot or the cameraman in the back had one with.  The Spot Tracker worked great for us.  We gave the code to our friends, family and the people at the office who were able to track our progress as we flew around the world.  All anyone had to do was log into the web site and they could track our progress in almost real time.  The Spot Tracker seemed magical and without doing any research I went out and bought one.  I was so proud of myself.  Then I got a comment from an occasional reader who pointed out what a moron I was.  He was a lot more polite that than that but he was right.   Instead of a Spot Tracker what I really needed was a personal locator beacon or PLB.  A PLB sends out a GPS signal like the spot tracker but does it faster and more accurately.  It also sends out a powerful 121.5 MHz signal which allows search and rescue to home in on you when they get close, something that might come in handy when I’m sitting in a raft in the middle of the Atlantic, at night, in heavy seas, in the winter.  Tell me again why I do this job?  So I’m taking the Spot Tracker back to the store and picking up a PLB.  But I still hope it’s a complete wast of money.

ACR Electronics ResQLink+ 406 GPS Personal Locator Beacon

King Air Down

A Beech King Air went down just a few days ago in an area of Brazil that I just flew through last month with SG.  The thunderstorms that prowl that country are truly massive and everyone we talked to before the flight told us to treat them with respect.  Now you see why.

Image

Image

The white line was the intended flight path and the red dot is the crash site.  SG and I dodged a lot of big storms on our trip and when shown a satellite image like the one above called it a day.

See Spot Fly

Ferry flying has changed dramatically since I first crossed the Atlantic over twenty years ago.  Back then we didn’t have a fancy glass cockpit, GPS with a world wide database, backup maps on an ipad  and a satellite phone that actually works.  What we had was a winds aloft forecast, a map and a compass.  Not much more than Charles Lindbergh had when he made the first crossing in 1927.  And up until recently if you went down all you had to help the search and rescue assets locate you was a portable ELT ( Emergency Locator Transmitter).  The old ELTs were better than nothing, but not much.  Yesterday I finally bought the latest in rescue location technology, the Spot Tracker.  When turned on this nifty unit sends a GPS position to Google Maps every 10 minutes so that your friends and family can use to track your progress anywhere in the world and if you have an emergency you can just push a button and the unit sends out an S.O.S. that notifies the emergency rescue coordination center your GPS location.  The unit is water proof and will transmit for days using three AAA batteries.  Having the Spot Tracker along on ferry flights increases the odds of surviving a crash or ditching dramatically and makes the job just a little bit less crazy.  Not much, but a little.

IMG_9534