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Jon,
Aircraft with ejection seats have an "ejection envelope" that is defined by speed, altitude, rate of descent and attitude of the aircraft. The very first ejection seats had to be fired at something on the order of 5,000 feet AGL, with no descent rate and a pretty much level attitude. Some were really odd, such as the initial design of the F-104, which fired the pilot downward and killed the greatest test pilot in U.S. history, Ivan Kinchloe (the Society of Experimental Test Pilots named its top award after him), when he had to eject shortly after takeoff...he tried to roll inverted before doing so but did not have the time. The zero/zero seats will allow ejection from an airplane sitting on the ground (there is a film of an early Martin Baker seat sitting in an English meadow, a man dressed in top hat and tails sits down, straps in and pulls the handles...pow...the chute opens, he lands, rolls, stands up and walks off, minus top hat). The Russians developed a seat that would turn and go up even if the aircraft were in an attitude in which the pilot was fired on a downward trajectory initially, and proved its worth in a stunning ejection at the Paris Air Show several years back. Even with the best seat, if the aircraft is low and still descending rapidly, the ejection may not be a success. All the best, Rick Jon Kraus wrote in message ... He was really close to the ground when he bailed out. Is there a minimum altitude to eject? Doesn't look like it. I guess it is better to nurse some broken bones then die in the wreckage. Thanks. Jon Kraus PP-ASEL Student-IA Dean Wilkinson wrote: Thunderbird F-16 cockpit video of ejection at Mountain Home AFB crash. http://www.razorsedgesoft.com/eject.mpg |
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