
Likewise, you'd need to duck, though:

Maybe this one:

No... THIS ONE

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Naki wrote:QUOTE (Naki @ Sep 1 2011,9:29 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>...hmm need to have big b......ank acciunt!
The Harvard in knife edge has a descent rate of maybe 10,000fpm.
I'll bet the instructor was wistfully wondering about a Zero/Zero Martin Baker where he was sitting!
SO perhaps not impossible to photograph, but very unlikelyIan Warren wrote:QUOTE (Ian Warren @ Sep 2 2011,10:06 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>... i brought all four and had them framedSO how is it that you always have these things before me??
Let's see Your "unable to photograph" shot, then!Last edited by Charl on Fri Sep 02, 2011 1:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Charl wrote:QUOTE (Charl @ Sep 2 2011,1:53 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Cheers, lads......ank account!
The Harvard in knife edge has a descent rate of maybe 10,000fpm.
I'll bet the instructor was wistfully wondering about a Zero/Zero Martin Baker where he was sitting!
SO perhaps not impossible to photograph, but very unlikelySO how is it that you always have these things before me??
Let's see Your "unable to photograph" shot, then!
....ohhh its doomed then
Naki wrote:QUOTE (Naki @ Sep 2 2011,2:35 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>....ohhh its doomed then
No!
The situation was saved because the rookie pilot, in a blue funk, rolled the thing over on its back...and PUSHED
The downside costwise is a rebuild firstly of the engine: the P&W lubrication system fails under negative "g"and you're meant to cut the throttle when you invert.
This one was flat out, and so...
The second bit of expense came from the wheels-up landing, a little beyond the runway threshold
I do love my flight simulator...
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