In message , D. St-Sanvain
writes
Alan Erskine a écrit dans
igpond.com :
On 12/03/2011 10:24 AM, Netko wrote:
Sea Venom FAW 21 of 893 Squadron crash landing on Eagle following
damage from
anti-aircraft fire during Operation Musketeer, November 1956
It's not crash landing. It was _intentionally_ landed this way to
test a new landing system - rubber surfaced flight deck!
It seems these trials were taken earlier :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7Lu6LEQ0zo
A Vampire aboard the HMS Warrior (48/49)
That's why aircraft carriers today put the rubber on the aircraft
tyres, not the carrier.

Despite what the commentator says, the idea of the rubber deck wasn't to
shorten the landing run, it was to do away with the need for the weight
and complexity of an undercarriage. Early jet engines had comparatively
low thrust and high fuel consumption, so any way of making the aircraft
lighter was welcome.
The pilot in these trials was Captain Eric 'Winkle' Brown, RN.
--
Peter
Ying tong iddle-i po!