Military Aircraft: airshows, operational, whatever, lets see what you have!

Last week in Pardubice Airport (Czech Republic) there was great air show mostly presenting older planes. Here, some of my captures:


Pardubice 2015 Air Show by Lukasz Bien, on Flickr


Pardubice 2015 Air Show by Lukasz Bien, on Flickr


Pardubice 2015 Air Show by Lukasz Bien, on Flickr


Pardubice 2015 Air Show by Lukasz Bien, on Flickr


Pardubice 2015 Air Show by Lukasz Bien, on Flickr


Pardubice 2015 Air Show by Lukasz Bien, on Flickr


Pardubice 2015 Air Show by Lukasz Bien, on Flickr


Sopwith Camel - Pardubice 2015 Air Show by Lukasz Bien, on Flickr


Pardubice 2015 Air Show by Lukasz Bien, on Flickr


Pardubice 2015 Air Show by Lukasz Bien, on Flickr

It was also first serious test for me of the new combo (7dII + 100-400II).
 
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Hi Guy.
Im a bit of a sceptic, perhaps you or others could enlighten me. Is it really possible for a passenger airliner to go vertical right after takeoff, I realise that with no passengers or their luggage and a light fuel load the aircraft would have plenty of power to call upon, or was what we saw a result of crafty camera angles and lens distortion or was it just pure CGI?
Cool film whatever, definitely stolen!

Cheers, Graham.

GuyF said:
Now that's how all take-offs should be! Fly it like you stole it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0qHy4lGb2M&feature=youtu.be
 
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Hi Lucasz.
Some very nice shots of some beautiful aircraft, loving the WW1 aircraft, and the polished alloy planes are always a pleasure to see. Nice work.

Cheers, Graham.
LukasS said:
Last week in Pardubice Airport (Czech Republic) there was great air show mostly presenting older planes. Here, some of my captures:

It was also first serious test for me of the new combo (7dII + 100-400II).
 
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Valvebounce said:
Hi Guy.
Im a bit of a sceptic, perhaps you or others could enlighten me. Is it really possible for a passenger airliner to go vertical right after takeoff, I realise that with no passengers or their luggage and a light fuel load the aircraft would have plenty of power to call upon, or was what we saw a result of crafty camera angles and lens distortion or was it just pure CGI?
Cool film whatever, definitely stolen!

Cheers, Graham.

GuyF said:
Now that's how all take-offs should be! Fly it like you stole it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0qHy4lGb2M&feature=youtu.be

Boeing 707 Barrel Roll - Pilot Tex Johnston Performs Roll In Dash-80 Prototype Aircraft In 1955

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AaA7kPfC5Hk

So, yes, passenger aircraft do have possible flight capabilities that ordinarily go unused.
Really, we wouldn't want it any other way.
 
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Valvebounce said:
Hi Guy.
Im a bit of a sceptic, perhaps you or others could enlighten me. Is it really possible for a passenger airliner to go vertical right after takeoff, I realise that with no passengers or their luggage and a light fuel load the aircraft would have plenty of power to call upon, or was what we saw a result of crafty camera angles and lens distortion or was it just pure CGI?
Cool film whatever, definitely stolen!

Cheers, Graham.

GuyF said:
Now that's how all take-offs should be! Fly it like you stole it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0qHy4lGb2M&feature=youtu.be

The 787 has pretty powerful engines but I think you would need to see the side on shot to know what the actual angle of take off was as that top view can be deceptive. So I found a video they did in preparation for the 2014 Farnborough show. Not vertical but still impressive.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GZRKm6PG918&feature=youtu.be
 
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Valvebounce said:
Hi Guy.
Im a bit of a sceptic, perhaps you or others could enlighten me. Is it really possible for a passenger airliner to go vertical right after takeoff, I realise that with no passengers or their luggage and a light fuel load the aircraft would have plenty of power to call upon, or was what we saw a result of crafty camera angles and lens distortion or was it just pure CGI?
Cool film whatever, definitely stolen!

Cheers, Graham.

GuyF said:
Now that's how all take-offs should be! Fly it like you stole it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0qHy4lGb2M&feature=youtu.be

Definitely not CGI. I suspect a mixture of zero payload, full thrust and camera angle allow a "near vertical" angle of attack.

I gather only certain airliners have the ability to perform anything that might approach being called a stunt. I saw an interview with a former Concorde pilot who (early on in its development) was sitting at the controls with a test pilot. The test pilot did a barrel roll which surprised the pilot just a bit. "Well, I've rolled it one way, you better roll it back", said the test pilot. He did. Try that in a 747 and you'll rip the wings off. Shall we start singing Rule Britannia?
 
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GuyF said:
Valvebounce said:
Hi Guy.
Im a bit of a sceptic, perhaps you or others could enlighten me. Is it really possible for a passenger airliner to go vertical right after takeoff, I realise that with no passengers or their luggage and a light fuel load the aircraft would have plenty of power to call upon, or was what we saw a result of crafty camera angles and lens distortion or was it just pure CGI?
Cool film whatever, definitely stolen!

Cheers, Graham.

GuyF said:
Now that's how all take-offs should be! Fly it like you stole it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0qHy4lGb2M&feature=youtu.be

Definitely not CGI. I suspect a mixture of zero payload, full thrust and camera angle allow a "near vertical" angle of attack.

I gather only certain airliners have the ability to perform anything that might approach being called a stunt. I saw an interview with a former Concorde pilot who (early on in its development) was sitting at the controls with a test pilot. The test pilot did a barrel roll which surprised the pilot just a bit. "Well, I've rolled it one way, you better roll it back", said the test pilot. He did. Try that in a 747 and you'll rip the wings off. Shall we start singing Rule Britannia?

Not true. Barrel rolls do not induce abnormal G loads, it is a 1G maneuver that pretty much anything moving can do.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-KNbKFMBsQE
 
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tolusina said:
privatebydesign said:
......

Not true. Barrel rolls do not induce abnormal G loads, it is a 1G maneuver that pretty much anything moving can do.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-KNbKFMBsQE
repost

As always, do you have a point? Mine was specifically addressing the post above mine with video contradicting the statement, repost or not it was relevant.
 
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Hi Folks.
Thanks for clearing that up for me, I did know some airliners had pulled some fairly stunt like manoeuvres, my suspicion was about going vertical or near vertical. Just about to check the videos you have linked to.
Edit. Thanks, the side view gives a really good impression of just how steep the climb out was, not quite as steep as it first appears in the original linked video, but not unimpressive to say the least.

Cheers, Graham.
 
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