E
ex-orbinaut
Guest
Well, my F-15C test flight. My frame rate is fine. Not my best first flight; a bit of unexpected excitement at the end. Anyway, here it is;
From Batumi, as usual, up to the rendezvous with the tanker over Kobuleti...
...sorry, can't get the hang of this boom thing :lol:. More practice required.
However, the performance is way better than the SU-33. Mach 2.4 at 45,000, then the zoomed up...
...about 10 km higher than the SU-33. Then down to check the maximum sustained altitude on full afterburner. Level, it was just a shade short of what I had acheived with the SU-33 at the top of the zoom!
Then something odd happened. Back down cruising at 38,000 ft, I applied afterburner and both engines flamed out, about 10 seconds apart. They would not relight (even the thrust levers jammed closed during the relight attempt, and would henceforth not move). No idea why, I still had 1,000 + lbs of fuel remaining. Sheldon Cooper's quote came to mind;
"I believe the appropriate metaphor here involves a river of excrement and a Native American water vessel without any means of propulsion".
I was close enough to Kobuleti (and high enough, obviously) to plan and maneuver onto an approach, guessed a target VAPP that might work...
...and the result was un-
-believable. Luck, indeed. Now, I wonder why the engines flamed out?
From Batumi, as usual, up to the rendezvous with the tanker over Kobuleti...
...sorry, can't get the hang of this boom thing :lol:. More practice required.
However, the performance is way better than the SU-33. Mach 2.4 at 45,000, then the zoomed up...
...about 10 km higher than the SU-33. Then down to check the maximum sustained altitude on full afterburner. Level, it was just a shade short of what I had acheived with the SU-33 at the top of the zoom!
Then something odd happened. Back down cruising at 38,000 ft, I applied afterburner and both engines flamed out, about 10 seconds apart. They would not relight (even the thrust levers jammed closed during the relight attempt, and would henceforth not move). No idea why, I still had 1,000 + lbs of fuel remaining. Sheldon Cooper's quote came to mind;
"I believe the appropriate metaphor here involves a river of excrement and a Native American water vessel without any means of propulsion".
I was close enough to Kobuleti (and high enough, obviously) to plan and maneuver onto an approach, guessed a target VAPP that might work...
...and the result was un-