gatordev said:or your canopy was blown off accidentally. Both cases make it very hard to fly,
Not if you're Harmon Rabb, he can put it down on the boat without the canopy, and land a Tomcat on the boat from the backseat!

gatordev said:or your canopy was blown off accidentally. Both cases make it very hard to fly,
Coota0 said:Not if you're Harmon Rabb, he can put it down on the boat without the canopy, and land a Tomcat on the boat from the backseat!![]()
TXHusker05 said:And use his wing to push the wing of another Tomcat past 45 degrees to take it out of autopilot because the pilot and RIO were out cold(For you Tomcat guys, can that even work?)
phrogdriver said:If they were both unconscious, wouldn't he want the autopilot to stay on? I, thankfully, didn't see that episode.
Don't know the F-14 in particular, but I know that the flight director in my aircraft will kick off in the affected channel if it goes beyond error tolerances. Usually this is due to the pilot manipulating the controls, vice someone trying to tilt me with his wing, however.
Lawman said:Both Crew were suffering from hypoxia and passed out. The theory was get the auto pilot off and the plane will decend (in a very violent and probably unrecoverable way if you've ever been unconcious you know why) and the pilot would regain conciousness and recover.
Now how a pair of seasoned winged aviators would not recognize the early to mid stages of hypoxia and decend the damn plane I have no idea. But hey thats what you get from a show produced by a former Air Force medical guy.
heyjoe said:I didn't comment earlier because TV and movie plots are often rooted in fantasy after they run out of ideas. As to seasoned aviators recognizing hypoxia, if you haven't been to the altitude chamber yet and experienced it yourself, hypoxia is usually accompanied by mild sense of euphoria and well-being. That is why it is so dangerous. A Tomcat was lost when the aircrew went off oxygen and were goofing off wearing their garrison covers to show off to their lead. If cockpit pressurization fails and mishap report believes it did in this case, hypoxia can cause you to pass out with inevitable result. There is at least one and maybe more Hornet mishaps where cockpit pressurization is suspected as cause. You'll see how dangerous it is in the chamber.
Lawman said:Oh Ive experianced it before in the chamber at Wright Patt, that was a fun CAP trip. And while yes I did experiance a mild euphoric feeling (I likened it to Hypothermia without the whole cold part) I recognized that something was wrong. I thought that was the whole purpose in the chamber to teach aircrews to recognize and react to the situation.
Lawman said:Both Crew were suffering from hypoxia and passed out. The theory was get the auto pilot off and the plane will decend (in a very violent and probably unrecoverable way if you've ever been unconcious you know why) and the pilot would regain conciousness and recover.
Now how a pair of seasoned winged aviators would not recognize the early to mid stages of hypoxia and decend the aircraft to a lower altitude I have no idea. But hey thats what you get from a show produced by a former Air Force medical guy.
Lawman said:Oh Ive experianced it before in the chamber at Wright Patt, that was a fun CAP trip. And while yes I did experiance a mild euphoric feeling (I likened it to Hypothermia without the whole cold part) I recognized that something was wrong. I thought that was the whole purpose in the chamber to teach aircrews to recognize and react to the situation.
heyjoe said:I didn't comment earlier because TV and movie plots are often rooted in fantasy after they run out of ideas. As to seasoned aviators recognizing hypoxia, if you haven't been to the altitude chamber yet and experienced it yourself, hypoxia is usually accompanied by mild sense of euphoria and well-being. That is why it is so dangerous. A Tomcat was lost when the aircrew went off oxygen and were goofing off wearing their garrison covers to show off to their lead. If cockpit pressurization fails and mishap report believes it did in this case, hypoxia can cause you to pass out with inevitable result. There is at least one and maybe more Hornet mishaps where cockpit pressurization is suspected as cause. You'll see how dangerous it is in the chamber.
From what I remember, farting was highly encouraged.....A4sForever said:....the chamber is a great place to fart, however.
Wasn't there and haven't heard the story before, but I would imagine the "Stud slumped over stick" EP would be more similar to a trim runaway than actual OCF . . . as the AOA isn't excessive and control inputs will affect the aircraft, the only precondition being having to muscle the guy in front off the stick first.Fly Navy said:That's kind of the definition of OCF... though I know what you're saying. Lots of gray areas.
nittany03 said:Wasn't there and haven't heard the story before, but I would imagine the "Stud slumped over stick" EP would be more similar to a trim runaway than actual OCF . . . as the AOA isn't excessive and control inputs will affect the aircraft, the only precondition being having to muscle the guy in front off the stick first.