Ive never seen one of these. Wild...
Any screenshots of the panel?
Ive never seen one of these. Wild...
Any screenshots of the panel?
Humble Poly bender and warrior of Vertices
Alienware Console i7 3770 CPU 3.40 GHz / 16 Gigs of RAM / GTX660 GC w/2 Gigs of VRAM / Windows 7 64 Ultimate
Running 3X Samsung 840 SSD HD's, 200 Gig each, 500/500 Read/Write
Very nice. Many thanks for the screenshots.
Looks like a fun bird to fly.
Humble Poly bender and warrior of Vertices
Alienware Console i7 3770 CPU 3.40 GHz / 16 Gigs of RAM / GTX660 GC w/2 Gigs of VRAM / Windows 7 64 Ultimate
Running 3X Samsung 840 SSD HD's, 200 Gig each, 500/500 Read/Write
Nice little video of the Buccaneer strutting it's stuff at Red Flag
.
Back around 1983, I was Airboss aboard HMCS Margaree, a Canadian DDH (ASW-helo-carrying destroyer). While working with the NATO Squadron, StaNavForLant (aka "Stanley Foreskin"), I would often hang around the Ship's bridge and pilotage during my non-flying hours. I found I could learn useful things while watching the "Fish-Heads" playing their part in the ongoing War Games.
One of my strongest and fondest memories of those times, was when our vessels were transiting between the Shetlands and the Orkneys, and we came "under attack" by Buccaneers out of Lossimouth. The aircraft were detected to our rear, and they quickly closed towards our "six", weaving back and forth in what I thought at first were purely evasive manoeuvres, but always managing to stay at our Six.
And it soon became aparent that part of *our* tactic was to turn to bring our forward guns to bear, so as to augment the aft gun. But those clever guys in the Bucc's just kept swinging to limit our firepower to the aft gun only. Pure magic to watch these huge, fast "smoking" aircraft cranking large bank angles at such low, low altitudes -- usually 100 to 200 feet! Best noisy, smoky "airshow" I ever saw!
I've always harboured a fondness for "functionally beautiful" aircraft, and Blackburn's Buccaneer kinda epitomizes that definition, I think. Y'know, with that big, beefy landing gear and the big "barn" gear doors to go with them. And that "pregnant" bulge in the after fuselage, to say nothing of those huge, air-brake doors. It made for a really *solid* looking aerodyne!
But enough of my nostalgic babbling. My chief reason for this post is that I stumbled across this rather interesting video on YouTube regarding the history of this lovely aircraft. Worth watching, methinks:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46a-7N_13Sk
A tad lengthy, but interesting nevertheless.
-Jon
-------------
If you try to fail,
and you succeed,
which have you done?
Another one to check out is the video from Operation Pulsator; when the Bucc's flew down the streets of Beirut :0
It could fly higher (and lower) than its eventual replacement, the Tornado GR1, and with a higher cruise speed and lower fuel burn, true it was a lump of an aeroplane 63,000lbs max all-up weight; best aeroplane I ever worked on so far.
That bomb bay was very versatile; you could add extra fuel tanks for range or capable buddy tanker; or fit a range of stowage crates
to fly useful things around in while still maintaining use of wing stations (remembering to inhibit bomb door operation !!)
ttfn
Pete
I can highly recommend this one!!! :mixedsmi:
i9-10900K, 64 Gb RAM, RTX 3090 FE, Win10 Pro 64-bit, Reverb G2
Pete, Mon Vieux!
I've been looking high and low for such a video, but cannot seem to put a finger on it (them?). Can you possibly give us a steer to the link for the video you describe?
Sounds most tantalizing, after reading through the short write-ups on the incident.
-Jon
-------------
If you try to fail,
and you succeed,
which have you done?
At the risk of going off topic (because there's no Buccaneer's on it) there's a marvellous film of 60's Royal Navy aviation here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LFzRtOuj5GQ
Ian.
Yeah, the Royal Canadian Navy (RCN) -- back when we had such expensive things as carriers -- modeled itself after the RN, right down to those single-use cables going to waste after each and every launch.
As a First-Timer aboard the ship during air ops, probably my very first WTF? moment was seeing all those cables splashing into the sea! If ever there was a simple problem in need of a fix, that was it.
After all, even the Murikens aren't so profligate, are they!?!
I often imagined an exchange like this, after some important battle had been lost:
Board of Enquiry: "Well Captain, were your aircraft serviceable?"
Skipper: "Yes. All were ready to go."
BoE: "Did you have sufficient fuel and armaments?"
Skipper: "Yes, plenty of both."
BoE: "Then why f'god's sake did you NOT launch your aircraft!?!"
Skipper: "Well . . . y'see . . . it seems we had freshly run out of launch cables during our last training exercise,
so we had to leave them sitting on the deck."
-Jon
-------------
If you try to fail,
and you succeed,
which have you done?
LOL! Here you go...
Attachment 94783
Absolutely LOVING having the camera crate (no pod needed ) with this model!
i9-10900K, 64 Gb RAM, RTX 3090 FE, Win10 Pro 64-bit, Reverb G2
It is until you look at the cost of a whole sortie and realise it's a rounding error! Around the early '60s HMS Victorious briefly gained a system for retaining them, basically a second shuttle behind the first which had a rope tied to the cable, this then got removed for reasons I've never learnt. Subsequently when Ark Royal underwent her refit to operate Phantoms a revised system was fitted to both catapults, around the same time the US carriers also started having them fitted. There's an RN video somewhere on deck operations that states you'd get 20 launches from a cable before it was considered used up at which point they'd just let it fly off the end. The catcher seems to have resulted in an extension beyond the flight deck for those catapults that had them.
No, actually, because with reusing them likely comes with an ever-escalating risk of failure at launch. On certain aircraft, where the lift/thrust/launch force parameters were as narrow as the Bucc S.1, the risk to lose an aircraft and likely the crew on a partial catapult launch over a silly cable is nonsensical. USN and others navies' records from the 50s to the 70s are replete with cases of aircraft and crew losses from "cold" shots and other catapult related failures.
As Skippy pointed out, in light of the other consumables, the launch cables would have been an insignificant factor.
Anyway, as regards the S.2, I'm stoked to see such a "rich" breadth of model and loadout options. A question - in the 5 minutes I had to look at this model since buying it, I noticed that the arrestor hook and wing fold didn't appear to work on the RAF models. That would make sense, of course, historically. But if, for my own enjoyment, I'd like to activate those on the non-RN models, is the logic built in to the panel, and redirecting the aircraft.cfg "panel =" to the naval versions' panel? Or is the wing-fold and hook "hard coded" to be off in the RAF/SAAF models?
thanks,
PS - looking forward to Bruce's repaints (mentioned over at the Flying Stations boards). Indeed, any repaint for this lovely lady will be avidly appreciated. Can't wait for work to quieten down so I can get some decent flying time in her!
Yeah, what's a few dead aircrew when you can save cables!
Odd, they should do, I'll double check, the only thing that shouldn't work is the launch assist as the strop points and hold back were deleted during the conversion process. I mean by BAe not me!I noticed that the arrestor hook and wing fold didn't appear to work on the RAF models.
Thanks Skip.
Would love to be able to have both the wing fold and hook work on all models - ideally using the FSX commands, but worst case, using VC switches would be fine too.
Blue skies and lots of launch cables ...
DL
Here are a couple of paints for the S2 in RAE West Freugh colours, these paints are for the latest build of the Buccaneer Version 2.1 released 6th November2013
XW986
XW988
You can get them at the link below
RAE Bucc S2 Pair link
Bruce
Wow. Great. Thanks Bruce. :ernae:
-- WH
If at first you don't succeed, try, try,try again. ... or go read the manual.
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