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Biggest and smallest aviators



 
 
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  #11  
Old January 31st 05, 07:19 PM
Ed Rasimus
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On 31 Jan 2005 14:25:31 GMT, (Pechs1) wrote:

This article from the Air Force Safety Center BRBR

Sounds like USAF type stuff. Like g-loc as well. We flew F-16s just like the
USAF did and I never heard of a gloc instance of all the USN pilots...a little
training and how to apply g's goes a long way. Of course the guys that flew the
F-16N were all fleet experienced aviators...
P. C. Chisholm
CDR, USN(ret.)
Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer


Dunno what made you guys so strong. USAF aviators have all this blood
flow to the brain (that's why we're too smart to try to land on
boats!)

Seriously, there are plenty of HUD tapes of F-16 two-seaters in which
either the IP or student goes to sleep and after several queries the
other crewmember recovers the jet. Most insidious aspect is that for
20-30 seconds AFTER g-loc, the victim still may not realize it
occurred!

Even the humble T-37 had the ability, under the right conditions to
put someone to sleep. I recall one student I had in my early IP days
who was actually a very good stick. Nonetheless, one sortie I gave him
a "runaway trim" exercise in which I ran full aileron trim in while he
was in control. He saw my hand on the trim button and assumed I had
control although we had not gone through the "I got it/you got it"
exchange.

The Tweet started a series of aileron rolls, each with the nose
dropping further until we were wound up quite tightly. When I took the
airplane and started the pull-out I wound up hauling ten Gs (pegged
the G-meter!) I watched him sitting next to me fight to keep his head
up and then finally slump totally in the seat--unconscious. This was
well before the days of F-16s and G-loc, but there was no doubt it was
way beyond simple loss of vision--i.e. blackout.

And, before you say it--yes, I screwed up by letting it go that far.


Ed Rasimus
Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret)
"When Thunder Rolled"
www.thunderchief.org
  #12  
Old January 31st 05, 09:58 PM
Bob
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Navy had a height restriction in the 50's, I believe it was 5'4".

Guys I knew close, like 5'2" used wads of paper in their socks. In the
SNJ some used foot-blocks to get to the rudder pedals and/or cushios
behind their backpack chutes to get closer to the action. The height
limit was 6'4" I think. Supposedly you had to be less than 6'0 to fly
a Tink (A-4) but that restriction went out the window when we started
running short of Tink drivers on Yankee Station. Biggest guy I ever
saw in a Tink was a CAG named "Tiny" Granning. At least 6'6" and 250,
plane captains actually stuffed him in from both sides. His normal
plane was the Demon them Phantom but I saw him CQ the Tink on the Tico
and it was a wonderment. Another big long legged guy in Phantoms
routinely blew out his tires when arresting because his feet just
surged forward when the wire hit. Best size in most carrier planes was
around 5'10", 150 pounds. Both the F-8 and F-4 had large roomy
cockpits and would take the larger sized guys. I agree this whole
G-lock phenomenom must have been a blue-suiter affliction. Most planes
took some stick pull to get G's. Usually a guy who pulled to more G's
than he could handle just eased off. Out cold you couldn't be pulling
too hard. Releasing the G's normally brought you around pretty quick.
Even very hungover from a big night of stingers I'd get a little tunnel
vision around a G or so before any greying occurred. Maybe the blue
suiters today just go from happy assing around to lala land without
passing go. It's a mystery for sure.

  #13  
Old February 1st 05, 12:21 AM
Jim Carriere
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Mike Kanze wrote:

...And - if you DO keep your legs - lead weights make for an interesting
swim once you splash.


Naa, interesting walk. Hold your breath until the shore or run out
of breath, whichever happens first

(BTW, my reply only came up with your text, everything after the "--"
got deleted- one more reason to use Netscape and not Explorer... neat
trick!)
  #14  
Old February 1st 05, 12:24 AM
Jim Carriere
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José Herculano wrote:

http://www.nomi.med.navy.mil/Nami/Wa...pics/exams.htm



What a pain... I would have met this standards... failed my flight school
application because I had 18/20 uncorrected in the right eye.


Jose, the vision standards vary over time. The post-post cold war
drawdown overmanning backlash has ended and a mini drawdown, if you
will, seems to be the way things are headed right now. So I bet
things like medical waivers may tighten up soon for a few years.

Just my educated guess/opinion on the big picture.
  #15  
Old February 1st 05, 02:54 AM
Ogden Johnson III
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Jim Carriere wrote:

(BTW, my reply only came up with your text, everything after the "--"
got deleted- one more reason to use Netscape and not Explorer... neat
trick!)


I don't know how to break this to you Jim, or more properly,
these to you but;

a) If by "Explorer" you mean Internet Explorer, it is not a news
reader, aka news client.

b) If by "Explorer" you mean Outlook Express, when I used it [for
a very brief period before getting real email and news clients],
it would, indeed, observe the "-- " [dash dash space] properly
formed signature separator, and delete the sig.

c) In fact, all self-respecting news clients have always
recognized a properly formed sig separator, and deleted the sig
when one replies to a Usenet post.

It is not a "neat trick", it has been a part of the NNTP protocol
since before there ever was a WWW, or Internet Exploder, or
Lookout Express, or Netscrape.

ObNostalgia: Bring back tin, bring back Mosaic, bring back
***CONNECTION LOST***
--
OJ III
[Email to Yahoo address may be burned before reading.
Lower and crunch the sig and you'll net me at comcast.]
  #16  
Old February 1st 05, 02:56 AM
Aardvark J. Bandersnatch, MP, LP, BLT, ETC.
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"Ed Rasimus" wrote in message
news
On Sun, 30 Jan 2005 22:19:03 GMT, "Aardvark J. Bandersnatch, MP, LP,
BLT, ETC." wrote:


"José Herculano" wrote in message
.. .
I remember reading that one of VF-17s Corsair pilots was so small he had
to
"get creative" to be able to use enough rudder on take off. Sometimes you
see a picture in which it looks like there is a contortionist gorilla in
the cockpit.

I know there are some size guideliness, and also know that there are
waivers signed here and there.

My topic proposal is:

Do you have some good stories to tell about guys that were really too
big
or too small to be in that particular cockpit?


A long time ago, I knew an AF pilot at Tyndall who regularly flew with
about
ten pounds of lead weights in his speed jeans. One day he forgot to put
the
weights in, plane caught fire, he was too light to eject, rode that
flaming
beast (delta dart) all the way back, landed it, walked away smoking.


"Too light to eject"??? Never heard of such a thing during 23 years of
tactical aviation riding a whole variety of boom-seats. We had a
maintainer commit suicide at Korat in '73 by prying the banana links
off of the sear on a Martin-Baker in an F-4 while leaning over the
canopy rail. Seat didn't seem to mind that nobody was sitting in it.

The only thing lead weights in the pockets of the G-suit would do is
insure severe leg fractures in any sort of high speed ejection.


Not being the pilot-y type, I took him/them at his/their word. But I saw him
bring that flaming screaming piece of trash back and down, so I figger he
had a good reason not to punch the button.



  #17  
Old February 1st 05, 02:59 AM
Aardvark J. Bandersnatch, MP, LP, BLT, ETC.
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"Pechs1" wrote in message
...
aardvark- A long time ago, I knew an AF pilot at Tyndall who regularly
flew
with about
ten pounds of lead weights in his speed jeans. One day he forgot to put
the
weights in, plane caught fire, he was too light to eject, BRBR


Balderdash...there is no minimum weight to eject.


Hmmm. Since you'r USN(ret), mayhap you knew an F-4 type name "hermit"?


  #18  
Old February 1st 05, 08:16 AM
Jim Carriere
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Ogden Johnson III wrote:

Jim Carriere wrote:


(BTW, my reply only came up with your text, everything after the "--"
got deleted- one more reason to use Netscape and not Explorer... neat
trick!)



I don't know how to break this to you Jim, or more properly,
these to you but;

a) If by "Explorer" you mean Internet Explorer, it is not a news
reader, aka news client.

b) If by "Explorer" you mean Outlook Express, when I used it [for
a very brief period before getting real email and news clients],
it would, indeed, observe the "-- " [dash dash space] properly
formed signature separator, and delete the sig.


Woops, I did mean Outlook Express. I fired it up to see if there as
a difference, and it didn't clip after the "-- ". Must be something
you can set on that program. Come to think of it, I used to know
that. They say memory is the second thing to go, what was the first
again?

c) In fact, all self-respecting news clients have always
recognized a properly formed sig separator, and deleted the sig
when one replies to a Usenet post.

It is not a "neat trick", it has been a part of the NNTP protocol
since before there ever was a WWW, or Internet Exploder, or
Lookout Express, or Netscrape.


Right there with you on self respecting news clients.

By the way, I'm not sure from your .sig whether you even bother to
use Yahoo, but their spam filter is far far better now than about a
year or two ago. I only get a few, uh, interesting emails a day, and
some days none (at one point is was 10-20 a day).

ObNostalgia: Bring back tin, bring back Mosaic, bring back
***CONNECTION LOST***


I first read this newsgroup (and many others) using tin... Brings a
tear to my eye thinking about it, no mouse, no light, no motorcar
  #19  
Old February 1st 05, 02:25 PM
Pechs1
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aardvark- Hmmm. Since you'r USN(ret), mayhap you knew an F-4 type name
"hermit"? BRBR

Nope, but I knew more than a few little guys that didn't carry weights in their
gsuit pockets.

Also before the 'crack aviator' folly....
P. C. Chisholm
CDR, USN(ret.)
Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer
  #20  
Old February 1st 05, 04:10 PM
Ogden Johnson III
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Jim Carriere wrote:

Ogden Johnson III wrote:


By the way, I'm not sure from your .sig whether you even bother to
use Yahoo, but their spam filter is far far better now than about a
year or two ago. I only get a few, uh, interesting emails a day, and
some days none (at one point is was 10-20 a day).


Yep. I do actually look in there at least once a day. I signed
up during a transition [under pressure from competitors in the
"freebie so we can talk them into a paid account" email market],
the result of which, in short order, was that they improved their
spam filtering, increased the size of free account storage,
removed the trash and spam mailboxes from being counted against
the users storage ... ...

Nevertheless, I kept the sig in the faint hope that people would
send email to where I can use my preferred email client - I don't
really like yahoo but SVEN made me do it. Alas, the people who
actually look and figure out the ojiii and the comcast.net seem
to be few and far between. [For those that don't figure it out,
I forward their email from Yahoo to my comcast address, and still
use my preferred email client. ;-]

ObNostalgia: Bring back tin, bring back Mosaic, bring back
***CONNECTION LOST***


I first read this newsgroup (and many others) using tin... Brings a
tear to my eye thinking about it, no mouse, no light, no motorcar


Yeah. Lotta emotional pain the day I finally canceled my unix
shell account, abandoning tin, rtin, pine. But in all honesty,
I'd never go back. ;- Getting too lazy now that I'm fully
advancing into geezerhood.
--
OJ III
[Email to Yahoo address may be burned before reading.
Lower and crunch the sig and you'll net me at comcast.]
 




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