No shit! (BTW... BzB and Ron, don't try to pass around the armband tonight, Walt, 707guy and I know who the OOD is today.Mmmmmmmm - midrats...

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No shit! (BTW... BzB and Ron, don't try to pass around the armband tonight, Walt, 707guy and I know who the OOD is today.Mmmmmmmm - midrats...
Can't forget about the ol' chili bar on the TR - chili and all the fixins 23 hours a day. Until we started running out of stuff...
And then there is collective friction vs trim, pitch bias actuator vs no PBA, and wide chord blades vs normal blades.
AVCS sucks balls. The "30 minute thump" it creates when clearing out errors feels exactly like a wire strike. Not a good feeling.
And my favorite "fun trivia fact" that helps guys out a lot when they first learn it. In the FLIR capable aircraft the left seat Cyclic is installed with an offset of about 2" to the left. (To provide room for the copilots right leg with the HCU installed.) This always results in guys landing with right drift their first few times in the left seat, since they fall back on the muscle memory of the cyclic being in a different spot for a correct profile.
Gee whiz! Sounds like two handfuls (heck, three handfuls!) regarding dealing with H-60 variants. A sincere "Hats Off" to you H-60 drivers! How many H-60 variants are there in the Navy at this time? Shoot, when I was on AD back in the mid '80's and early '90's, it was just the B model in HSL and the F model was starting to appear in HS...pretty simple.
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The 60A, 60L, and 60M without airspeed hold engaged, none of which have a PBA vary airspeed with small collective inputs by about 5kts. Neither hold airspeed like the 60B did. I don't remember how the 60B was, but all of the Army 60s require forward cyclic inputs when entering an auto.Do you really notice the PBA (or lack of it)? Maybe it's because you can go faster, but I just don't really notice a difference without it. I'm hoping to jump back in a -60B "soon" and will look to see if I notice it. Then again, I may just be compensating for the lack of it and not even realizing it.
BzB: Can I assume you only flew from angled-deck carriers? Clearly, in the early jet era, everyone took a "cut" to land…since there was no bolter option…and the pack ahead of you.The only cut to land on the CVs, were the props like A-1s, S-2 varients, etc. until they were retired.
BzB
Well, yes... but you still hat to stay on-speed and AOA.Cat, over a few drinks with a Tomcat driver a while back, I remember him saying that because of the slow spool rate of the TF-30s, you had to keep a high AOA behind the boat in the Alphas to maintain a higher RPM for power inputs. Any truth to that?
Two good questions...Cat,
I've heard that the F-4 was very stable and well-behaved around the boat, just had a fast approach speed, whereas the Turkey was something of a handful. Would you agree? What made the F-14 so difficult to land? Also, a lot of Phantom vids I've seen have them rocketing off the bow with the extended nose strut and what seems like an overrotation off the cat...was that a technique specific to that airplane?
Well........ I took a cut in/before the wires once, at night on the USS Midway. Guys who were there still talk about it 40+ years later. Wish I had the plat tape. Or maybe I don't....
*The only cut to land on the CVs, were the props like A-1s, S-2 varients, etc. until they were retired.
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BzB
The 60A, 60L, and 60M without airspeed hold engaged, none of which have a PBA vary airspeed with small collective inputs by about 5kts. Neither hold airspeed like the 60B did. I don't remember how the 60B was, but all of the Army 60s require forward cyclic inputs when entering an auto.