本帖最后由 choi 于 1-5-2017 13:00 编辑
(2) George Frank, Night Landings on Carrier Test Pilots to Limit. Los Angeles Times, Oct 5, 1991.
http://articles.latimes.com/1991 ... 6_1_carrier-landing
Note:
(a) "ABOARD THE USS NIMITZ — Eleven pilots from the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station * * * They had trained for years to make their first nighttime landings on an aircraft carrier & & & Every fighter and attack pilot flying for the Navy or Marine Corps has qualified at night on a carrier"
(i) Marine Corps Air Station El Toro
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_Corps_Air_Station_El_Toro
(near Irvine, California; In use 1943–1999 (later auctioned off to civilian developers); The name El Toro came from the nearby small community which in 1940 only had a population of 130 people
(ii) Spanish-English dictionary:
* toro (noun masculine; from Latin [noun masculine] taurus bull): "bull" (also spelled "toro" in Italian)
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/toro
(b) "Working in darkness, the pilot has to bring in a jet at speeds that can top 150 mph and hook an arresting cable 4 inches off the deck in a space that is roughly 20 feet [6.1m] wide and 100 feet [30.5m] long." (Read further at (d). )
(c) "That final approach [to an aircraft carrier for landing] 'is the moment of truth' * * * the 3-year-old El Toro training group--known as VMFAT 101--has had only one fatal accident."
(i) moment of truth
(ii) VMFAT 101
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VMFAT-101
(Marine Fighter Attack Training Squadron 101 "is a United States Marine Corps F/A-18 Hornet training squadron. The squadron is based at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, California [located in Miramar, a neighborhood of San Diego]")
(iii) Reader Mail : What Does V Stand For In VMFA? Flying with Fish (name of the website, apparently run by flyingfish, whose answer is quoted here, Sept 24, 2010
http://flyingwithfish.boardingar ... -stand-for-in-vmfa/
three consecutive paragraphs:
"Originally, back when the US Navy began creating aircraft squadron designations, the letter 'V' denoted an aircraft that was 'heavier than air' while the letter 'Z' was used for dirigibles that were 'lighter than air.'
"As the Navy and Marine aviation divisions grew and lighter than air aircraft were removed from service, the letter 'V' was changes [sic] to denote a 'Fixed Wing' aircraft.
"With the implementation of helicopters, the Navy and Marines added the letter designation 'H' for helicopters, to denote a 'rotary wing' aircraft.
(d) "Pilots say the trick to landing aboard a carrier--day or night--is to keep the nose of the plane up eight degrees [from glideslope] and snag one of the four cables that run across the deck with a small hook that hangs under the tail of the airplane. On the night approach, the pilots use instruments until they reach a point about three-quarters of a mile from the carrier. Then they shift their eyes from the glowing green panel and lock onto a bright ray of light beamed from the carrier deck. The light, called a 'meatball' because of its shape, warns the aviator if he is too high or low. As they drop to the deck, they have only a split-second to calculate, since the four cables, one of which they must snag, are only 40 feet [12.2 m] apart. As soon as the plane hits the deck, the pilot pushes it to full throttle. That gives the pilot the power he needs to become airborne again and avoid plunging into the water if he misses the cable."
(i) The 'meatball' will be explained in the next posting.
(ii) "As soon as the plane hits the deck, the pilot pushes it to full throttle."
Wiki says the same:
modern United States Navy carrier air operations
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mo ... rier_air_operations
section 10 Landing (paragraph 1 only): "The pilot aims for the middle arresting wire, which is either the second or third depending on the configuration of the carrier. Immediately upon touchdown, the pilot advances the throttles to full power so that a touch and go (known as a "Bolter") can be executed in the event that all trap wires have been missed. Ideally, the tailhook catches the target wire (or cross deck pendant), which abruptly slows the aircraft from approach speed to a full stop in about two seconds. As the aircraft's forward motion stops, the throttles are reduced to idle, and the hook is raised on the aircraft director's signal.
(e) During takeoff from a carrier, "it [fixed-wing aircraft] is hurled from the deck by a steam catapult, going from motionless to 170 mph in less than three seconds. |