Sunday, November 8, 2009

Milk Run - Coming to a Close

The briefings that were held at happy hours tended to be somewhat superficial, if you really want to know. A lot of ideas were always put forth and a lot of posturing would take place to defend one's ideas about almost any subject that was being discussed. When we talked about the so-called "approach end engagement" the conversations mostly dealt with why the hell you would have to do such a thing in the first place. This was a last ditch method to save one's neck without having to eject. Now Navy guys do this a lot. It's something they train for, wash out of the program for and spend a lot of time bragging about. Air Force professionals prefer large areas of concrete laid down on dirt. Landing on a floating piece of steel never seemed quite right somehow (how DOES that work, anyway?).

So here's your introduction to the piece of equipment known as the MA1A Barrier in combination with the Barrier Arresting Kit (BAK 9) (in the diagram).

(Quoting from an Ops Manual)

2. Types of USAF Systems.

2.1. MA-1A. The MA-1A emergency arresting system consists of a net barrier and

cable system designed to engage the main landing gear of an aircraft. Because it is a unidirectional system, it must always be installed in the overrun area.


Aircraft engaging this system above the speed and weight limits provided in Figure 2-

3 will result in a runout greater than 305 meters (1,000 feet), or cable failure. Most MA-1A systems employ ships' anchor chains as the energy absorber. These systems require a runout area of at least 259 meters (850 feet) plus the length of the aircraft. The chains lie on either side of the runway overrun, beginning at the barrier location and running in the direction of aircraft travel; however, some MA-1A systems use a BAK-9 instead of a ships' anchor chain

as the energy absorber. These systems require a runout area of at least 290 meters

(950 feet) plus the length of the aircraft. This configuration is an MA-1A/BAK-9 combination.


If you actually read all of that stuff above, you should note two important items:


First it says that this is a unidirectional system. It is designed to work one way.


Second, note which way the arrow is pointing. Right to left.


The thing is designed to catch a fighter that has aborted take off for whatever reason and it prevents the airplane from traveling out into the local boonies by arresting it with a net-like barrier or cable (like an aircraft carrier). It assumes a decelerating "catch" under about 180 knots (in typical use more like 80K). This is a departure end engagement.


In an approach end engagement, you engage the mechanism from left to right. Yup, wrong way on a one-way street. Oh and you don't want to catch the part of the barrier that is attached to the ship's anchor chains. Look at the diagram and you'll see that if used from right to left, you pick up the drag of one link, then two, then three and so forth. From left to right you grab the entire weight of the chain immediately and probably rip the ass off of your plane (or worse). You might want to note as well that there are about 35-50 feet between the chain catch and the cable catch.


I am starting to brag here.

5 comments:

virgil xenophon said...

Don't EVEN ask me how I wound up here, but here another old F-4C/D driver is. I'm a '66 LSU grad, took my pilot tng at that playground of the idle rich at Laughlin in Del Rio, hence on to DaNang and the 366th TFW for my SEA tour. From reading you I thought you might want to come over to a place I hang out at a lot run by a recently ret Navy O-6 F/A-18 driver. It's called "Neptunus Lex", Lex being the proprietor. Mostly Navy, but a sizable contingent of zoomies (we're tolerated :) ) and a few Army, Marine & Marine air. Lots of active duty as well as ret. Ex enlisted & NCOs well represented also. Covers everything from flying to politics to critiques of service policies and attitudes to civilian flying. Lots of pics of "plane prOn." :) Lots of links also.
Sizable female contingent, military wives mostly but also several older married types (most of whom have their own blogs) who are interested in things military and flying (the Lex babes) One is an 82 yr old ex-race car driver and songstress--quite a gal and smart as a whip. An interesting collection of regulars. You ought to mosey over and give it a look....

I'm also "BI" like you (coastal, that is.) Split time between Marina del Rey and New Orleans where our main home is. Of course I hate your guts as a UofF grad, otherwise you seem like an ok guy....

Dave's Daily Day Dream said...

Hi, thanks for the comments. I often wonder if anyone is reading this stuff. My kids asked me to put some of it down - there you go.
Actually, I married into the whole UF Gators thing. I went to Wash U. St Louis (BA, ROTC, '60). I don't think they even have an intramural football program.
I was 8TFW, 68TFS Korat and Ubon.
Couldn't find "neptunus lex", is it a URL?
Get back and
Check six, they're REALLY out there now, and um, GO GATORS!

virgil xenophon said...

Dave, when I tried to link you to a friend of mine and tested it, blogger says your blog doesn't exist! And, further, that it's available to register! When I tried to Google you I got nothing. Only way I stumbled across you was while researching articles on BAK-9 for a civilian pilot friend of mine to find a picture to show him.And you were linked to one of the articles. NO WONDER you're low on traffic. You don't exist to the outside world! Just try to google yourself and see.. Gotta run, I'll be back on the other stuff...

Dave's Daily Day Dream said...

Changed a few things to get all of the markers the same. It seems to work for me. Appreciate your passing it around.
Tried and found neptunus lex.

virgil xenophon said...

Well, I've rejoined. Funny you being a graduate of old "Wash U"--I'm VERY familiar with the campus. My father was head tennis coach at Eastern Ill. U. for 30 yrs and used to play Wash U, Principia and Concordia every year. I used to ride down with the team when I was in Jr. H & HS, so know the campus well. At time you were there a guy named Harry Burras was Wash Us Tennis coach and his son Harry Jr was a ranked player of my age-guess he would have been in HS at time you were there. As a tennis player myself (that's how I ended up at LSU--on tennis scholarship) I also played the Grannite City Open every summer, so was down there for that, too.

Additionally my father's brother was Principal, then Superintendant of schools in Collinsville Ill, so we were down a lot for that reason too. When I was in HS we drove down several times for baseball games in the old-old stadium when Musial was still playing. Remember Harry Carey as announcer at StL? He was in his prime then. We used to love to go to those games because you got two games for the price of one--the game you were watching and the game Harry was describing on the radio. He and his side-kick--who did the games in his skivvies, no ac in those days--would both be hammered by 7th inning. Used to hold one of those little sq. transistor radios up to the ear while watching game. A hoot! And the old chain-o-rocks bridge--who could forget that! Only bridge in US with bend in middle..