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john smith
July 18th 06, 01:09 AM
Farnborough pictures: Russian air force aerobatic display team seeks 
help naming MiG-29OVT manoeuvres
Russian manufacturer RSK MiG is offering the ultimate prize for the 
aviation enthusiast  a trip to Russia and a flight in a MiG-29. The 
prize is*on offer to the lucky person who can come up with names for the 
four new aerobatic manoeuvres flown by the unique vectored-thrust 
MiG-290VT in its Farnborough display (pictured below).
The prize is available to visitors to the air show, where the aircraft 
is the star of the flying display. RSK MiG is asking spectators to name 
the four new manoeuvres flown by the Russian air force's Swifts 
aerobatic display team by dropping into the manufacturer's chalet. There 
will be a number of prizes for the best suggestions  but the overall 
winner will win the mouth-watering trip to Moscow, as RSK*MiG¹s guest. 
Readers*can also email RSK MiG, although the prize is not open to 
non-Farnborough attendees.*
http://www.flightglobal.com/Articles/2006/07/17/Navigation/408/207871/Far
nborough+pictures+Russian+air+force+aerobatic+disp lay+team+seeks+help+nam
ing+MiG-29OVT.html
Larry Dighera
July 18th 06, 02:59 AM
On Mon, 17 Jul 2006 23:09:18 GMT, john smith > wrote in
>::
>Readers*can also email RSK MiG, although the prize is not open to 
>non-Farnborough attendees.*
1.  Looks something like a snap roll
2.  Looks like a cartwheel
3.  Looks like a tumble
4.  Looks like a half-loop to a flat spin
This thing is so maneuverable, it's difficult to believe what you're
seeing.
Here's a quote:
    The MiG-29M OVT’s display demonstrates the aircraft’s ability to
    fly at very low speeds without angle of attack limitations, and to
    remain controllable in zero-speed and negative-speed (tail
    forward) areas of the envelope for sustained periods, where
    previous Russian fighters could only venture momentarily – for
    example during a tailslide or ‘kobra’ manoeuvre. 
    
    The new control system gives the pilot an unparalleled ability to
    point the aircraft (and thus his missile seekers) ‘off axis’, away
    from the direction of flight. 
    
    The display includes a number of unique manoeuvres, including the
    ‘double kul’bit’ (double somersault) and the ‘boomerang’, but
    Vlasov maintains that the aircraft remains easy to fly.
Although this appears to be a different aircraft, the aerobatics seem
similar:
    They've videotaped the eye-popping hyperacrobatics of the new
    Russian Su-37 Super Flanker fighter jet, built with unique
    pivoting engines. "We don't have anything that can do that," a
    senior Pentagon official tells our Richard J. Newman. The video
    shows a somersaulting jet that turns course on a dime. 
   
    What to watch for:
    As the plane moves down the runway, the video shows its unique
    "thrust vectoring" engines pivoting up and down. This feature
    allows the plane to use the engines, along with conventional
    control surfaces, to maneuver the aircraft. That allows the kind
    of acrobatics seen in the rest of the video: end-over-end tumbles,
    rapid reversals of direction, and turns tighter than any existing
    fighter jet can manage. • Watch the video. 
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/politics/whispers/documents/super_flenker.mpeg
.Blueskies.
July 18th 06, 03:20 AM
A Lomcha-what?
"Larry Dighera" > wrote in message ...
> On Mon, 17 Jul 2006 23:09:18 GMT, john smith > wrote in
> >::
>
>>Readers can also email RSK MiG, although the prize is not open to
>>non-Farnborough attendees.
>
> 
>
> 1.  Looks something like a snap roll
>
> 2.  Looks like a cartwheel
>
> 3.  Looks like a tumble
>
> 4.  Looks like a half-loop to a flat spin
>
> This thing is so maneuverable, it's difficult to believe what you're
> seeing.
>
> Here's a quote:
>
>    The MiG-29M OVT's display demonstrates the aircraft's ability to
>    fly at very low speeds without angle of attack limitations, and to
>    remain controllable in zero-speed and negative-speed (tail
>    forward) areas of the envelope for sustained periods, where
>    previous Russian fighters could only venture momentarily - for
>    example during a tailslide or 'kobra' manoeuvre.
>
>    The new control system gives the pilot an unparalleled ability to
>    point the aircraft (and thus his missile seekers) 'off axis', away
>    from the direction of flight.
>
>    The display includes a number of unique manoeuvres, including the
>    'double kul'bit' (double somersault) and the 'boomerang', but
>    Vlasov maintains that the aircraft remains easy to fly.
>
> Although this appears to be a different aircraft, the aerobatics seem
> similar:
>
>    They've videotaped the eye-popping hyperacrobatics of the new
>    Russian Su-37 Super Flanker fighter jet, built with unique
>    pivoting engines. "We don't have anything that can do that," a
>    senior Pentagon official tells our Richard J. Newman. The video
>    shows a somersaulting jet that turns course on a dime.
>
>    What to watch for:
>    As the plane moves down the runway, the video shows its unique
>    "thrust vectoring" engines pivoting up and down. This feature
>    allows the plane to use the engines, along with conventional
>    control surfaces, to maneuver the aircraft. That allows the kind
>    of acrobatics seen in the rest of the video: end-over-end tumbles,
>    rapid reversals of direction, and turns tighter than any existing
>    fighter jet can manage. . Watch the video.
>
> http://www.usnews.com/usnews/politics/whispers/documents/super_flenker.mpeg
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