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om: Cub Driver lo
The most famous example was the launch of the Dootlittle raiders in April 1942, when you can see a B-25 actually dipping below deck level as it took off for Japan. That was Travis Hoover's plane. He was the second off after Doolittle. Apparently the pitch up of the deck as he launched put the nose up too high and he dropped down to pick up air speed. Whether that was done with conscious intent or whether that's just the way the inert mass behaved when trundled off the front end of a flight deck depends on whose telling the tale. Apparently timing the launch to coincide with the correct angle of the pitching deck was critical and it took a near miss for the navy guy waving the flag (whatever you call him) to get the timing exactly right, the progress of a B-25 down the flight deck not being exactly the same as that of the single-engine jobs the navy was used to launching. Chris Mark |
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