Sie sind nicht angemeldet.

1

Sonntag, 10. April 2011, 17:43

Wenn ein Sea Harrier auf nem Frachtschiff notlandet!

Forenberg.deVideoYouTube


Fotos sind hier zu finden!
Der Lebenslauf von Sea Harrier ZA176

Zitat

Twenty-five years ago last June, the Spanish container ship Alraigo was steaming off the coast of Portugal on its way to Tenerife in the Canary Islands. Not far away, aboard the British aircraft carrier HMS Illustrious, which was participating in a NATO exercise, 25-year-old Sub-Lieutenant Ian “Soapy” Watson was preparing for his 14th sortie in the Sea Harrier vertical-takeoff-and-landing jet. Watson was paired with a more senior pilot in another Harrier and ordered to find a French aircraft carrier. Simulating combat conditions, the two departed under radio silence and with radar off. They split up when they reached their search area, climbed to assigned altitude, turned on their radar, and swept separate zones.

Search completed, Watson descended and headed to the point where he was to rejoin the flight leader. When the leader didn’t show, Watson relied on his inertial navigation system to get him back to the Illustrious. “I went through everything I had in the airplane to help me,” he said. “I tried the radio. I had the radar on. I squawked emergency. Absolutely nothing. There were no returns on the radar.”

Knowing that shipping lanes lay off the coast, Watson turned east. When his radar began showing a target, Watson turned toward it. At 50 miles out, running low on fuel, he was down to only a few minutes of flight time. At 12 miles, Watson caught sight of the Alraigo. His plan was to make sure the ship saw him and then eject.

With no way to communicate with the ship, Watson did a flyby “to get their attention.” As he flew alongside, Watson saw that some cargo containers formed essentially a deck, one similar to a landing pad he had used during training. “Well, I thought, in for a penny, in for a pound, and I landed the airplane on the containers.”

As Sea Harrier ZA 176 settled on the slick containers, it began sliding backward. Watson tried to retract the landing gear. The main gear dropped off the back edge of the container. A delivery van on the ship, en route to a florist shop in Tenerife, suffered a blow as the rear of the Sea Harrier hit the deck. The captain of the Alraigo refused to let the drop-in visitor throw him off schedule: The British government was informed that Watson and the jet would arrive in Tenerife in four days.

When the Alraigo, with the jet atop the containers, docked at Santa Cruz de Tenerife, a horde of reporters was on hand. The ship’s crew and owners filed a salvage claim and were awarded some £570,000 ($1.14 million at the time) as compensation for the “rescue.” When Watson returned to the Illustrious, a Board of Inquiry essentially did nothing. But when the Illustrious returned to port, Watson underwent a second Board of Inquiry.

In 2007, Britain’s National Archives released a number of Royal Navy files, and the second inquiry report was finally made public. Noting that Watson had completed only 75 percent of his training before he had been sent to sea, the board blamed Watson’s inexperience, and his commanders for assigning him an airplane “not fully prepared for the sortie,” a reference to radio problems. Nonetheless, Watson was reprimanded and given a desk job.

Text und Bildquelle!

Erstaunliche Geschichte!

"When my time on Earth is gone, and my activities here are past, I want they bury me upside down, and my critics can kiss my ass."Bob Knight

Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.."
(Benjamin Franklin)

2

Sonntag, 10. April 2011, 18:54

Sehr interessant Peter!

Danke


Thorsten

3

Sonntag, 10. April 2011, 18:56

Gerne, jederzeit wieder.
Jedenfalls hatte der Kerl ne Riesen- Glückswurst dabei an diesem Tag. Der ist nach der Landung zurückgerollt, und kann von Glück sagen, daß er nicht doch noch in den Bach geplumpst ist.....

"When my time on Earth is gone, and my activities here are past, I want they bury me upside down, and my critics can kiss my ass."Bob Knight

Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.."
(Benjamin Franklin)

4

Sonntag, 10. April 2011, 21:00

Muss der Pilot eigentlich für die "Heimfahrt"bezahlen,oder gilt er als blinder Passagier?
Aber da noch die Nerven zu behalten und nicht den berühmten Hebel zu ziehen,ist schon stark!! :hail:
...runter kommen SIE ALLE

Viking01

Always Check six!

wcf.user.posts: 6 608

Wohnort: Nähe EDDK

Beruf: Steuergelderausgeber a.D.

  • Nachricht senden

5

Sonntag, 10. April 2011, 21:36

Ja, und dennoch wurde er gegrounded....
Viele Grüße



If in doubt mumble, if in trouble delegate!
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro, 16GB DIMM DDR3, i7-3770 OC 4,0 GHz, GTX 680 2 GB

6

Sonntag, 10. April 2011, 21:37

Wohl aber aus sogenannten internen Gründen.....

"When my time on Earth is gone, and my activities here are past, I want they bury me upside down, and my critics can kiss my ass."Bob Knight

Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.."
(Benjamin Franklin)

7

Montag, 11. April 2011, 12:14

Die Nerven muss man echt haben - Respekt :winke:

:bier:
Gruß

Dirk 8)

Flusitechnisch nun in den Rentenstatus gewechselt