Re: Climbing on board a fighter
- From: "Dave Kearton" <dkearton///////@ozemail.com.au>
- Date: Sun, 15 Jul 2007 08:39:22 +0930
Allen Epps wrote:
In article <Xns9967A6B583B36ch2uswestnet@xxxxxxxxxxx>,
Clark <ch2@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Ed Rasimus <rasimusSPAMLESS@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote inNo ladders = less stuff to be stowed on a flight deck and less to be
news:unct831rvhg4c2auc4jadg01ql5i24kfjc@xxxxxxx:
On Fri, 06 Jul 2007 20:18:11 +0200, Max Richter
<RichterMax@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Now my questions: Is there a policy that Navy-planes have steps or
ladders build in them?
Can't speak for USN policy, but I can't think of any recent Navy
designs that didn't have some sort of fold-down/out steps.
blown around a flight deck. Last USN carrier aircraft I can think of
without a ladder was the A-4. You could get on it during cross
countries and such by stepping on the wing drop tank fin thence the
wing and inch up the refueling probe. That's the way we did it in
training command anyway.
Pugs
That sounds like an accident waiting to happen.
--
Cheers
Dave Kearton
.
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