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And on the other side of that coin...
When I was a First Officer/Instructor Engineer with Braniff back in 1979/80, we were on the second to last leg home from Denver (Stapleton) to Colorado Springs and then back to Dallas.* Our flight clearance was to fly down the front range at 11,000 feet and I recall the Captain saying:* "Let's see how fast this baby will go." I did not know about gliders back then but we made 350 KIAS through an area that I later flew a lot in gliders.* I hope there were no gliders about at the time.* A 727 would have been very large and loud at max power from the perspective of a glider. On 5/10/2019 1:07 PM, Dan Marotta wrote: OK, prior to transponders in gliders, I was flying over South Park, CO at the highest legal altitude.* A Citation jet heading for Buena Vista descended over me passing just in front.* I recall clearly his wheels in the gear wells.* Had I thought of it at the time, I probably could have read the brand name on the tires.* Very unsettling.* Still it was quite some time before I installed a Trig 22.* It had not been invented at the time of my close encounter. On 5/10/2019 10:47 AM, wrote: The Transponder chatter on other threads got me to thinking about who’s got the closest near-miss? Thought I’d kick it off with my incident over 40 years ago. I was flying my homebuilt wooden sailplane over Mono Lake, Ca. Cursing south at 16000’ and 60 knots when I spotted a 4 engine jet below and to my left. Our flight paths were going to intersect, but he was a good 500 feet below me. Two seconds later it became crystal clear that it wasn’t a 4 engine jet, it was a 4 pod jet with 8 engines and the B-52 was climbing fast! Too late for me to maneuver,I’m doing 60 and he’s doing maybe 360, and I didn’t want to throw my belly to him. I just sat there thinking I had a front row seat to my demise! As he passed just under my nose, I could clearly see the copilot reading his checklist! I’m sure they never saw me, but I sure as hell saw them! I figured the wake turbulence was going to tear my little Duster to bits, so I tightened up my parachute straps. Nothing! Guess the turbulence all went below and behind him.* How far can you see a man reading a book? I’ll lay claim at 50 Feet! Let’s hear your story, JJ -- Dan, 5J |
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