![]() 08/25/2013 at 15:09 • Filed to: Planelopnik | ![]() | ![]() |
![]() 08/25/2013 at 15:15 |
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That looks loud.
(Judging sounds based off sights FTW!)
![]() 08/25/2013 at 15:17 |
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...go get him !
![]() 08/25/2013 at 15:25 |
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That son of a bitch cut me off!
![]() 08/25/2013 at 16:48 |
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I read, somewhere, that "going ballistic" really means the point, such as at the top of a vertical climb, when the plane is no longer under control of the flight surfaces, and has become a ballistic object subject to the forces of gravity. The pilot of the ballistic plane radio the others in his wing to alert them to the fact that they are temporarily out of control. I don't know if this is true, but it makes sense.
Anyway, here's a shot of an F-15C going ballistic (or not). This is the C model, the last of the great single-seat dogfighters. I love how, in the second shot, the elevators are still parallel to the ground as the pilot rotates.
![]() 08/25/2013 at 17:10 |
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Well when they refer to a ballistic trajectory, they are referring to an arc shaped path. I just remember in Top Gun, Goose telling that to Maverick during a training exercise when he pitched the F-14 into a vertical climb.
![]() 08/25/2013 at 18:14 |
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I remember it as well. I think, though, that while it sounds cool, it's an incorrect use of the term.