Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Thursday, September 23, 2010
Bill Leff and the T-6 Texan at Oceana Air Show
Bill Leff did all the restoration on the T-6 Texan and she shines like a jewel in the sun. This radial-engine prop trainer was used from WW2 to Vietnam in a variety of roles. Bill truly pushes the envelope as the engine sputters and coughs in protest as he flies upside down just feet above the ground.
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Super Hornets at Oceana Air Show
Hey all,
The McDonnall Douglas F/A 18 Hornet was well represented at the airshow this weekend. These are two aircraft from the Fleet air power demonstration. As they roared overhead, pyro charges simulated a bombing run. Very cool.
This is a F/A-18E Super Hornet. The larger size (25% increase) of the airframe is not readily apparent, but the larger rectangular jet intakes are certainly noticable. I can't help but wonder what that did for the "stealthy-ness" of the aircraft.
The McDonnall Douglas F/A 18 Hornet was well represented at the airshow this weekend. These are two aircraft from the Fleet air power demonstration. As they roared overhead, pyro charges simulated a bombing run. Very cool.
This is a F/A-18E Super Hornet. The larger size (25% increase) of the airframe is not readily apparent, but the larger rectangular jet intakes are certainly noticable. I can't help but wonder what that did for the "stealthy-ness" of the aircraft.
A F/A-18F (two seater) Super Hornet gets a welcoming wave from a fan after its run. The jet intakes are really obvious from the front. The Blue Angels fly the A and B (two-seater) variants with much smaller and rounded intakes.
The Super Hornet pilots wave back to the crowd. It's nice to be able to show our appreciation to the men and women who fly these beautiful jets and used them to protect the freedoms we all enjoy.
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Blue Angels C-130T Hercules transport "Fat Albert"
The Blue Angels always bring their support crews and spare parts with them on a C-130 Hercules transport dubbed "Fat Albert." He's flown by Marine Corp Major Brendan Burks. It's nice to see the support staff getting a chance to show what they can do.
Oceana Air Show 2010
The E-2C Hawkeye is a carrier based radar and command/control platform.
It provides essential tactical information and provides a comm link between aircraft and carrier.
A member of the Red Devils, the British Army parachute team, brings the Red, White, and Blue into show center as we all sing the National Anthem.
Monday, September 20, 2010
F-22 Raptor at Oceana Air Show 2010
The F-22 demonstration didn't go as planned. The Raptor flew in did a quick vertical climb and did an almost right-angle turn due to its thrust vectoring capability. The announcer then said the aircraft had develolped a problem and couldn't finish it's demonstration. That was disappointing.
Blue Angels at NAS Oceana 2010
Hey all,
Just back from a tremendous weekend at the annual Naval Air Station Oceana Air Show. My friend Chris Dover and I drove down to see the show, hear the roar, and smell the exhaust. The Blue Angels performed, and as always, did a superb job. Their job is to take normal manuvers and do them FAR lower and closer than normal aviators. This precison control and skill is a hallmark of the Naval Flight Demonstration Team.
The Blue Angels in their "Diamond Formation" there is only 18 inches separating the canopies from the wingtips.
Just back from a tremendous weekend at the annual Naval Air Station Oceana Air Show. My friend Chris Dover and I drove down to see the show, hear the roar, and smell the exhaust. The Blue Angels performed, and as always, did a superb job. Their job is to take normal manuvers and do them FAR lower and closer than normal aviators. This precison control and skill is a hallmark of the Naval Flight Demonstration Team.
The Blue Angels in their "Diamond Formation" there is only 18 inches separating the canopies from the wingtips.
Blue Angel 5 banks hard.
Notice the contrails forming over the leading edges of the wings. As the wing angle of attack changes during the turn, the air can't fill the void fast enough and clouds form in the low-pressure areas.
Lead Solo Lt. Commander Frank Weisser and Opposing Solo Lt. Ben Walborn cross during opposing minimum radius turns. They are closing at many hundreds of knots (800+?) and pass within feet of each other. Phenominal skill and nerves of steel are nececessary. (BTW - I'm proud I timed the shot just right. My Nikon D90 is so fast and responsive that it makes shots like this possible. I love it.)
Friday, September 17, 2010
USS Wisconsin
On our way to the Oceana Air Show we decided to visit the USS Wisconsin, an Iowa-class battleship.
Wow.
That was cool. The "Wisky" as she's affectionately called, served with distinction in WWII, as wells as the Korean and Gulf wars.
That is one BIG ship, and her sixteen inch main guns can hurl a shell that weighs as much as a Volkswagen twenty-one miles.
Wow.
That was cool. The "Wisky" as she's affectionately called, served with distinction in WWII, as wells as the Korean and Gulf wars.
That is one BIG ship, and her sixteen inch main guns can hurl a shell that weighs as much as a Volkswagen twenty-one miles.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Hard at Work
Saturday, September 11, 2010
Me Her Us
Hey all,
Here are some pics of us we've taken recently.
Tomlin and I are hiking the Appalachian Trail. No problem as we hiked from the parking lot to the trail :) We took this in Shenandoah National Park along Skyline Drive. What a beautiful place.
Here are some pics of us we've taken recently.
Tomlin and I are hiking the Appalachian Trail. No problem as we hiked from the parking lot to the trail :) We took this in Shenandoah National Park along Skyline Drive. What a beautiful place.
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Video of Wind Turbines - TVA Buffalo Mountain Wind Power
These wind turbines are so awesome. Watch their graceful motion and listen for the "whoosh" as those massive (100+ foot) blades sweep across the sky.
Cool.
Peace,
John
PS - geek moment. I got to wondering about the whoosh and did a little math. If I'm right, the blade tips are moving at over 100 MPH! That will certainly generate enough turbulence to be audible.
PPS - super geek moment - With 100' blades the tips scribe a circle with a circumference of 628 feet (2pi x radius) we timed 4 revolutions in 15 seconds making it 16 rpm.
16 revs x 628' = 10048 fpm
10048'/5280 = 1.9 miles per min x 60 = 114 MPH
If the blades are 134 feet (as I read somewhere) the tip speed is 153 MPH.
Windrock Wind Turbines
Took a really cool drive up Windrock mountain to the wind farm today. The tubines (windmills?) are huge but graceful as they sweep across the sky.
Climbing the mountain you can't see them until you are almost there.
Climbing the mountain you can't see them until you are almost there.
Those blades (each over 100 feet long!) were really moving. We clocked them at 16 rpm which is quite fast for somthing that big. Our friends Billy and Karla, whose Jeep we rode in, said they'd never been able to hear the "whoosh" of the blades so clearly. Check out the video to see/hear them.
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