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Legacy Member
Originally Posted by
mrclark303
Got to love the Lightning Training Flight fin logo Charlie!
As we discussed in a previous thread, it was this very aircraft at that very display, that started my love affair with the Lighting!
Mine started in June 1970 seeing a formation of 16 x shiny silver Lightnings from the Wattisham Wing flying very low over my home in West London for the Trooping the Colour flypast.
---------- Post added at 01:31 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:23 PM ----------
Originally Posted by
GeeRam
Mine started in June 1970 seeing a formation of 16 x shiny silver Lightnings from the Wattisham Wing flying very low over my home in West London for the Trooping the Colour flypast.
Actually, it would have been the year before, in June 1969 when the Trooping Flypast involved the UK prototype Concorde flying in formation with 16 x Lightnings from Wattisham.
First time I saw a Concorde fly as well.
It was quite a sight...............and sound!!
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Thank You to GeeRam For This Useful Post:
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03-10-2019 09:31 AM
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Contributing Member
I can't remember the first time I saw the Lightning display exactly, but it would have been around 1967, probably at RAF Lakenheath or Mildenhall, or possibly Wethersfield.
The signature display for me was the classic take off, apply reheat, climb vertically, disappear very quickly!
I believe the Lightning still holds some brakes off to altitude records today.
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Don't want to high jack the thread but on the subject of Cold War Classics, I flew in to Southend Airport just before the weekend, Just on landing my mate said "is that a Vulcan Bomber" sure enough it was there and I had a quick luck on the net, next month is visit the Vulcan day........ see link below
Home | Vulcan Restoration Trust
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Contributing Member
The Lightning certainly had an incredible rate of climb, it cought out quite a few unwary pilots.
I remember a story of a pilots first solo flight in the aircraft, as recounted in one of my many books.
He decided to 'showboat' on take off, so carried out the typical spirited Lightning take off ... wheels up ... full reheat, low down the runway and into a sharp vertical rotation .... And promptly blacked clean out!
He came to when the aircraft was climbing through 3,000 feet, still close to vertical and going like a home sick angel in full reheat!
Very sensibly, he kept the incident to himself for many years and treated the Lighting with respect due from that point on.
It could certainly bite, if not treated with respect.
I believe the Typhoon actually has a superior rate of climb than the Lighting and one of the initial points pressed home to converting pilots, is coping with the brute power of the aircraft.
---------- Post added at 05:00 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:53 PM ----------
Originally Posted by
bigduke6
Don't want to high jack the thread but on the subject of Cold War Classics, I flew in to Southend Airport just before the weekend, Just on landing my mate said "is that a Vulcan Bomber" sure enough it was there and I had a quick luck on the net, next month is visit the Vulcan day........ see link below
Home | Vulcan Restoration Trust
XL426 was the original Vulcan Display Flight aircraft Geoff, her place was taken by the famous XH558.
I always keep an eye out for her when flying back into the UK in that direction.
So many dedicated skilled people, keeping these aircraft alive and breathing mate.
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Legacy Member
Well, I wouldn't like to hijack the thread either... but while we're talking Vulcans, here's another from the same film (Greenham Common 1981).
Attachment 99305
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Contributing Member
I bet that Gazelle pilot in the background met some of the downwash
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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