It is 7 seconds longI didn't watch the video, Navy pilots FTW.
OK now lets see both land on a carrier.It is 7 seconds long
It is likely that one would land and the other would not. Not a good video for sure. I assume a nice soft graceful landing is nothing more than luck on a carrier. To many variables, and a much shorter target.OK now lets see both land on a carrier.
Yall might not be friends for long talking like that.I've watched @Astro14 land both the 757 and 767, I suspect he did a secret stint in the Air Force![]()
I've watched @Astro14 land both the 757 and 767, I suspect he did a secret stint in the Air Force![]()
You can't flare an airliner like you would a small airplane, as a prolonged flare holding it off to just touch the wheels will yield a 5 star tail strike in the airliner. In the 75/76 you pitch up about 1/2 degree to arrest the decent rate and arrive on the runway holding that attitude.I’m pretty sure he’s said that he could do a silky smooth flared landing.
No risk of a tail strike on the Airbus A321 ( less margin ) unless you flared way too high ( but that would result in an “ unstable “ call from the PM and low energy GA ).Carrier landings ( no flare ) in a commercial airliner = hard landing inspection.
It’s rare, but I have seen two aircraft that ( not my flights ) had to have the landing gear replaced.
My company says we have to even report “ suspected hard landings “.
Because it is compressed about 4x.It is 7 seconds long
I am a graduate of many USAF schools, including Air Command and Staff College.I've watched @Astro14 land both the 757 and 767, I suspect he did a secret stint in the Air Force![]()
spindly little
Absolutely.![]()
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is the gear on lets say an F-16 "less substantial per ton" than an FA18? Perhaps ue the the requirement of harsher landing conditions?
Now that is funny. Inaccurate, but funny.It is very well known that if a pilot doesn't have what it takes to be selected as a U.S. Army Aviator, being selected as a U.S. Air Force Aviator is a good second choice.