What do you find most impressive or surprising about nighttime aircraft carrier landings? Share your thoughts in the comments below! ⬇ Please note that some footage in this video is not recorded at night in order to better illustrate the landing process. We appreciate your understanding as we aim to provide a clear understanding of nighttime aircraft carrier landings. Thank you for your support! 💙
i served on two CVS carriers in the late sixties, twin engine, piston engine aircraft. The surprising thing is that reasonable, college educated, very capable young men risk it all to launch and recover time after time in good and bad weather. This when a part of their preparation is studying other young men who died doing the very same thing. When the aircraft are prepped, maintained and armed by men, many of whom, like me, were younger yet and had never touched an aircraft before enlisting. It still goes on today, thank goodness!
"What do you find most impressive or surprising about nighttime aircraft carrier landings?" I'm a PP and I'm impressed that they can do it at all, especially in rough seas or gusty conditions. Even tho the Carrier is aligned with the wind (and what if the wind gusts momentarily off center line?), gusts will increase and decrease your airspeed - must be a real nail biter! My hats off to 'em, but ain't it thrilling to watch? Would love to get a ride.
Most impressive? That pilots are able to avoid disorientation and mental overload in that dynamic and high-risk environment. I suppose training and practice-practice-practice takes the edge off, but in the back of their minds pilots must sometimes think how wild it is that they are flying through the dark at a giant slab of steel.
I spent 4 years on the carrier USS Constellation in the 70's working the flight deck as a power plant mechanic and plane captain. Night shift could be terrifying at times. Especially during a storm, pouring rain and high winds. Pilots had the ACLS system ( Automatic Carrier Landing System ) they could use it to land but they did not trust the " black box" to land the aircraft for them and would shut it off at the last second before hitting the deck. I had many a pilot climb out covered in sweat and shaking like a leaf after a poor landing in the dark. It was much harder for the rescue Helo's returning after the last plane was aboard to land. They were a very big part of night operations and should have been mentioned in your video. It could turn your hair white working nights for all of us.
First, thank you for your service. I was on the Constellation on July 4th 1977 as a member of the All Philadelphia Boys Choir. I believe it was off the coast of Singapore. You guys gave us a full tour of the ship, including the flight deck, fed us a fantastic lunch and treated us like like rockstars. We were in the middle of a world tour, and it was nice to be on American soil on the 4th of July. Thank you.
I was a radar tech on the USS Forrestal in 82, her last cruise before SLEP. While I was a search radar tech, the ILS and ACLS radars were in the same shop. My understanding at the time was that the ACLS radar we had would lock on around five miles out, put the aircraft on flight path, then return control to the pilot at one mile out, and the pilot put it on deck. I was told that technically, the radar could put the aircraft on deck, but we weren't certified to that level. We actually lost an F4, and the pilot, during a night recovery that cruise. Came in low, clipped the deck, and broke up. I saw that immediate aftermath from "vulture's row" on the island, spot fires all over the flight deck from fantail to island. Since it was a night recovery, that meant our ACLS radar was involved, which resulted in investigators in our radar shop for a month, talking to techs and looking over maintenance records, etc. Final verdict was pilot error. We also lost an F4 to a failed cat shot. That was daytime, so I was asleep for that one, but I saw the film. Port side bow cat, everything seems normal, then about halfway down there's a burst of steam and all the momentum dies. The F4 still left the deck, but it also immediately dropped into the sea. Lost that pilot, too, as I recall.
I served on the Nimitz in 1981 as an EOD tech and I witnessed many takeoffs and landings. Unfortunately, I was also witness to a night-time crash firsthand. May God bless all my shipmates who did not survive that terrible night.
Thank you for the compliment. But the courage remark is a little off in that it took such furious concentration that there was no place for anything else, even courage. -- Michael, Major, USMC and Naval Aviator
Yeah, I spent 3 years of my life watching carrier landings ( and launches with full afterburners ) 6 hours a day or night night; in every kind of weather imaginable. Hot, humid, raining, freezing water and snow ( off North Korea ) and 85 foot waves in a typhoon ( no flight ops then ). Experience of a life time.
My first ever CO in a A7 squadron had a ramp strike during night flight ops during a storm; sheared off all landing gear and hook and slid over the wires and ejected, but wave action after he hit the water forced him against the ship and the propeller pulled him through where the water was about 10000+ feet; the pilot and plane were never recovered, only pieces of the chute. Many other pilots that had landed prior to him said they just missed having the same thing happen and said the deck was rising and falling about 20 feet! I had only been in the reserve squadron for a couple of months and had just met most of the pilots on a couple of drill weekends and squadron picnic prior to the 2 week deployment. Semper Fortis!
More accurate and informative than most. With 2 exceptions: 1. Every recovery has dedicated organic tankers overhead (in other words, aircraft from the boat configured as tankers). Aircraft requiring tanking during a recovery will always tank from those Navy recovery tankers. The video show Air Force tankers (and even Air Force aircraft refueling), especially in the beginning of the video. Naval aircraft do tank off of heavy Air Force tankers, but it's most often on the way to/from a mission or overland . . . never as part of a recovery. The standard around the boat for recovery tanking is "plugged and receiving" within 90 seconds of a bolter - that is never going to happen on an Air Force tanker at typical Air Force tanker altitudes. The Carrier Air Wing trains specifically for this - in fact it's one of the checks in the box they have to demonstrate before deployment certification. 2. The video implies that a carrier arrested landing consists of separate sensations of touching down, a split second where you're waiting for the deceleration, then deceleration in your straps, the head, then your whole body. This is how people imagine carrier landings who don't have carrier landings. It's what I assumed before my first carrier landing. It's not correct. When my parents asked me what it felt like, I told them "Get in your car and accelerate to about 40 miles per hour. Then drive it into a tree. While soiling yourself." You wouldn't feel the bumper hit the tree, then notice the hood start to crumple, then the seatbelt digging in, etc. You would experience it all at once. It's the same for arrested landings - one moment you are flying, the next moment it feels like you crashed into a brick wall. Everything in the cockpit surges forward at the same time - hopefully into some kind of restraint. The tires hitting the deck (750 feet per minute vertical deceleration), and the hook catching the wire and resulting horizontal deceleration (150 mph to zero in 2 seconds) are both felt simultaneously and instantly. It's an overwhelming shock at first, but you get used to it after a while. Even if the hook just misses a wire (leaving the longest possible distance of about 50 feet before the next wire), at landing speeds it's still less than the blink of an eye (not a figure of speech - we're talking small fractions of a second) for the hook to cross to the next wire and catch it. Imperceptible for a pilot. If a carrier pilot notices touchdown without the "crashing into a wall" sensation, they already know they missed the wire and will be airborne again in the next few seconds. But the rest of this video is pretty good!
Thanks for addressing the refueling. I was wondering how it's possible to fly up to tanker altitude (assuming a tanker was nearby) if you don't have enough fuel to circle around for another landing attempt.
I hear you. Being on a Carrier is an amazing experience but it depends upon your job. If I could have done it my way I'd have been a Corpsman....that was mos' def a non stress job and the Flips who worked in the Officer's Mess would always bring you steaks and the good chow that the officers got to eat. Enlisted mess was awful and today I wouldn't feed that crap to my dogs. I'd feed it to my pigs though, if I had any.
I was approved in early 90's to enter the NAVCAD from the United States Airforce and ended up getting a medical disqualification just past the halfway point through the training and was reassigned back to my Airforce unit where I was subsequently medically discharged. I will always be supportive of Naval Aviation. Thank you for sharing this video. Hope this inspires young aviators to get involved. with Naval Aviation. I am still a pilot to this day. Just never could do it for the Navy but I was at least approved to try and gave it my best and learned to be a decent pilot as a result of the training I got.
I am a pilot. Was a crew chief on a UH1D & UH1H in Vietnam 06/69 - 06/70. It ignited my passion for flight and later in life I learned to fly. Fantastic experience! I very quickly learned, in my opinion, that Naval pilots are the best in the world. I have tremendous admiration for them and the skill they had to have...along with balls of steel. Thank you for what you do!
My boss was a Naval Aviator. His recollection of his very first carrier landing was dominated by his reviewing the status of his life insurance while on the downwind leg of the pattern. That focus instantly transitioned to ONLY aircraft location and attitude when he assumed final. He obviously survived but ended up in P3 sub chasers after all the drama of successful carrier landings. I was a dry-land pilot and have a great admiration and respect for all Naval Aviators! Thanks to each of you for your incredible service!
I was on the Enterprise when she blew up in the Hawaiian Operating area. I was blown into the nets and busted both ear drums. Not a pretty site. We lost something like 134 brave men. I made it out with minor wounds.
Where can you find pleasure, search the world for treasure Learn science technology? Where can you begin to make your dreams all come true On the land or on the sea? Where can you learn to fly, play in sports and skin dive Study oceanography? Sign off for the big band or sit in the grandstand When your team and others meet In the navy Yes, you can sail the seven seas In the navy Yes, you can put your mind at ease In the navy Come on people, fall an' make a stand In the navy, in the navy Can't you see we need a hand In the navy Come on, protect the motherland In the navy Come on and join your fellow man In the navy Come on people and make a stand In the navy, in the navy, in the navy, oh They want you, they want you They want you as a new recruit If you like adventure, don't you wait to enter The recruiting office fast Don't you hesitate, there is no need to wait They're signing up new seamen fast Maybe you are too young to join up today But don't you worry 'bout a thing For I'm sure there will be always a good navy Protecting the land and sea In the navy Yes, you can sail the seven seas In the navy Yes, you can put your mind at ease In the navy Come on people, fall an' make a stand In the navy, in the navy Can't you see we need a hand In the navy Come on, protect the motherland In the navy Come on and join your fellow man In the navy Come on people and make a stand In the navy, in the navy, in the navy, in the navy They want you, they want you They want you as a new recruit Who me? They want you, they want you They want you as a new recruit But, but, but, I'm afraid of water Hey, hey look man I get seasick even watchin' it on TV They want you, they want you in the navy Oh my goodness They want you What am I gonna do in a submarine? They want you They want you, they want you in the navy In the navy Yes, you can sail the seven seas In the navy Yes, you can put your mind at ease In the navy Come on people, fall in make a stand In the navy, in the navy Can't you see we need a hand In the navy Come on, protect the motherland In the navy Come on and join your fellow man In the navy Come on people and make
For the most part this is pretty good. Brought back lots of memories. However, your mix of Air Force aircraft is confusing (especially the several clips of an F-16). And what’s with the two short segments of the MiG-29 in formation? You also have several segments where the video is transposed like you are looking thru a mirror. There are also some scenes which appear to be a shore based facility. We don’t wear short sleeves at sea (fire protection). And we don’t wear civilian attire unless we are leaving the ship to go on liberty. The video should have been scrubbed better by someone familiar with carrier aviation.
A very nice video and your "small glimpse " in this fascinating world is by far the best in YT in explaining all aspects of dangers, worries and operations above, on and below the flight deck. As a veteran conventional submariner I am highly impressed by the guts of those pilots. Love it
I have the utmost respect for these pilots and every person on the boat guiding and supporting their safe landing. Thanks and prayers 🙏 for all of you.
As a civilian Part 121 Flight Dispatcher @ 5:40 is why naval aviators are absolute bosses in my book. Had a chance to jumpseat with a CA who flew in the first desert storm, who happened to be training a FO moving into the left seat. FO was WAY high on the approach and the training CA immediately snapped into action *"My airplane !!!"* That had to be about 5 years ago, but I'll never forget it. ✈
Enjoyed the video, thanks. Brought back memories of my night carrier landings 50+ years ago with a lot less electronic "gewizz" landing aids...almost none in the A-4 Skyhawk. One nit, we would drop the hook upon entering holding overhead (day) or marshal (night); so as not to forget!
@@patfarra627 Pat You should check out joining the A-4 Skyhawk Association, we have a great quarterly journal and luncheon meeting at Tailhook every year. I am on the Board of Directors. We have equal Marine and Navy Directors. And our present President is a Marine. Semper Fi! Pete
I used to always say "The best time to drop the hook . . . is when you happen to be thinking about dropping the hook". Minimal drag penalty and totally worth it to not be "that guy" (which I was . . . one time only).
I went on a hop and had one of the most memorable experiences of my life! It was a daylight flight and we did inflight refueling! There was a time I thought we would crash!
I was just telling my girlfriend how crazy night operations are in the middle of the North Sea. I was stationed on the USS Little Rock (1971-72) and got a great view. Your video helps me understand what was going on. I was amazed at how many missed landings there were.
I spent four years aboard USS Independence in VA-66 A7E Waldo's in 72-75. I was an electronics troubleshooter working mostly at night. It's dangerous enough during normal landings and it Really gets hairy in rough seas with rain and a pitching deck of around 20 feet plus. With the wind across the deck, blowing rain, pitching deck and trying to maintain balance on a oil slick wet deck is treacherous, the pilots had a lot of guts to land the planes under these conditions.
Great post, Mike! I was also on the Indy 72-75. I was attached to VS-31 Topcats. Was AE troubleshooter at night launches. Had to keep your head out of your ass, for sure!
Fair Winds and Following Seas shipmates from a retired OS1. I was stationed on USS Semmes DDG 18 1983-84. Provided Plane Guard for USS America CV 66 in 1983 in the Caribbean.
As a VS 23 aircrewman on the USS Yorktown I was on 100+ carrier landings. Night, single engine, storms, rolling deck and still vertical at 81. Go Navy!
you know, showing an F16 refueling while describing carrier operations is not helpful, as the technologies involved are different. eg: navy aircraft typically use drogue basket and probe, while the air force typically uses a boom from the supplying tanker. at around 3:18 or so, we see the air force style of refueling, but the entire video is about the *navy*, so it would be better to show the *navy* method of refueling. there are also multiple instances where a close-up is provided of an F16, while the wide view is that of an F/A-18, and even some shots of russian aircraft. very strangely assembled video clips.
WOW, I've always thought these pilots are without any doubt amazing. My god I was tense just listening to the process. I can respect the fact it must become second nature but never just another landing.
I've talked to pilots an asked what are you thinking...? " I hear my heart beating and say do not let me down". Depending on the Glide scope angle it looks like they will fly right over you.... until the hit the deck in front of you.
As a Civilian, I saw the John F Kennedy. I was totally blown away by its size and by comparison, she is not the largest. After watching this video, I am so impressed with the nerve and skills of the Naval Aviator.
I was on board the U.S.S. Midway from 1980 -1983 , the last cruise in late 82 as a flight deck trouble shooter for VF-151. We had one pilot who was not able to land at night. The ops usually had him land last, after having to bingo(divert) to a nearby field for the 4th or 5th time he sadly transferred to a ground base for retraing. I never found out if was ever on a carrier again. We also took on 2 F-14s from the Enterprise because of rough seas. And boy were they rough, we almost lost an A -6 over the bow because a use of a wave, boke almost all 16 tie-diwns. If we weren't still recovering she would have pitched off the bow.
I was out in that kind of stuff too, VF-41, 1970-1974. Lots of Med and North Atlantic cruises through some very rough seas. I couldn't figure out why the USN would run a Carrier full of expensive aircraft into that kind of thing, rather than divert to calmer seas until these things passed. We got caught in a Killer Storm in the Bay of Biscay off the west coast of France, back in '73, I think and it was pure hell with everything flooding, and being thrown around. Then, on the same cruise coming home immediatly after all that damage we foundered for 3 days in the Triangle in a horrible storm. I loved watching air ops from the 07 level and I saw a lot of flight accidents and a couple of deaths.
So basically most of the problems come from trying to squeeze in a few sorties before the storm gets there. Then the storm gets there faster anyway. Navy pilots must age really fast.
Thanks for an awesome video. Feel the need for speed, Go Navy! Incredible the number of people that must do their jobs correctly to make this Navy run correctly. JOB WELL DONE to the senior enlisted and officers that ensure that the quality control is maintained.
Fixed wing guys are adorable. They have an entire ship filled with crew and tech to help them get on the ground safely. Meanwhile the chopper guys are landing in zero illumination in full brownout conditions while being shot at (and hit) on nearly every mission.
I’m curious why the F35 is catching the wire when it’s a VSTOL aircraft and can just gently set down on deck saving the airframe a lot of unnecessary stress ?
F35-C is the Navy variant. It is not STOVL. F35-B is STOVL, but a vertical landing can't be done if over a certain weight. Also, I'm sure you have to do wired landings to be carrier certified. I could be wrong about that when it comes to USMC, as they fly the B variant.
What a great video! Such an impressive task. I was totally astonished at the sight of carrier ops aboard the Eisenhower and Forrestal as a reservist. Our pilots only flew during the day and that was SO impressive seeing the ordered chaos on the flight deck.
I was ship's company as an ET in the radar shop on the USS Forrestal CV-59 back in 82. I was in charge of the ship's long range air search radar. Our shop was two work centers, one for search (SPS) radars, one for air navigation (SPN) radars. While I never directly worked with the SPN side, I worked with the people that did. My understanding of the ACLS radar we had back then, was that it would take control of the aircraft at about 5 miles out, putting it on the flight path, then return control to the pilot at 1 mile out, leaving it to the pilot to actually put the plane on deck (or not). I was told that the equipment could, in theory at least, actually land the plane itself, but this is how we were certified to operate. We lost two F4s on that cruise, one failed catapult launch, one failed recovery. The cat failure was daytime, and I was night crew, so I only saw the video. Those cameras they mentioned here that let you see the flight operations? That was on every TV set on the ship. We watched it in our radar shop, which is where I saw the video of the cat failure. A burst of steam halfway through the launch, followed by the F4 just sort of falling off the bow. The failed recovery was a night recovery, so under ACLS, and resulted in our radar shop being investigated. That F4 came in low and caught the round down. Broke up into lots of pieces, scattering debris and spot fires all over the flight deck aft of the island. Someone came into our radar shop (in the island) yelling about it and we all went out to vulture's row to see. So, we had investigators in our shop for days afterwards, poring over our maintenance records for the ACLS radar, interviewing the techs, etc. Ultimate ruling was pilot error. The TACAN mentioned here is a beacon. I was tech for the one we had on my second ship, a frigate (USS Vreeland FF-1068). For our use on the frigate, it was just a homing beacon to tell the helo (the only thing we carried) how to find us. It will generally be the antenna at the very top of the ship's mast. When I was first aboard the Forrestal, during workups before that 82 Med/IO cruise, I had a brand new 35mm camera. So, flight ops being "new" to me, I spent a bunch of time on vulture's row taking pictures. Turned out, the camera body was bad, so the whole roll of film was wasted. When we left on the cruise, I had the replacement body, so a good camera. But, by this point, flight ops was so "normal", I just kept thinking, I'll get to it eventually. Actually had to force myself out to take pictures towards the end of that cruise. And, I'm glad I did. I have a very good picture of a recovery, zoomed in on the tailhook, which is just about to catch the wire.
Since you asked for comments, here it is-- over fifty years ago, when I did it, I got my traps. We got lots of practice first and we were ready. The formula is "Meatball, Lineup, Angle of Attack". Then when the landing gear hit the deck, go to full power and retract the speed brakes. That way, if you get a hook skip or another cause of bolter, you're set up to fly off and come around again. If you get a wire the taxi director will come out and give a cut signal and hook retraction before directing to the spot. Thank you for letting me reminisce.
I served on the Lexington, green vest. It is an Incredible experience to be and work on the Fly deck. Great memories... IT WAS AN HONOR TO SERVE... GOD BLESS THE USA.
I was with VF-41 aboard USS Franklin D. Roosevelt (CVA-42) from 1970-74. I worked in the Ready Room a great deal but I was a Personnelman and spent a lot of time behind a typewriter typing and retyping enlisted evals. I berthed below the flight deck, directly under the #2 wire and our office was directly below the starboard cat. I hated being a PN, it was a useless and dead end job, boring as hell, but I did finally come around, ignored the redundancy of the job and after a couple of years I began to enjoy my term of service. I knew a lot of great pilots, many of whom have died early and I would suspect that being a Navy pilot had something to shorten their life spans. But, being with a Fighter Squadron was a great experience and there isn't a day that passes that I don't ruminate a little on those days and remember my old shipmates.
I flew the A-7 onboard the Ike for 2 deployments in the 80's. Flying at night under an overcast sky was like flying in a black sphere. The carrier was a speck of light. Add a driving rain and a pitching deck and game on. Coming to a stop onboard I at times told God, OK, thank you, I've got it from here.
A F14 Pilot (afaik) told the story where his RIO, after a successful bad weather Case III, got out of the cockpit and asked him "Don't you want to get out?" and the pilot was like "Yeah, when my knees stop shaking"
@@keirfarnum6811 Actually, there is an F-16N. We used them for adversaries at TOPGUN. They had an Air Force style "land hook" though, so no carrier landings.
To me, an EmCon Case lll Recovery in weather with a pitching deck, Blue Water Ops on a black-ass night, well executed by the air wing, is the height of professionalism and the most demanding task in all of Naval Aviation.
As a DCS F/A-18C pilot, I concur that carrier landings are very stressful and difficult. VR pilots have a much easier time than TrackIR pilots though, as they have more depth of field sense than the other.
I would really love to learn about this same process but for helicopters? Is there a marshaling and recovery process for them? What does it look like? How does Plane Guard work? How does cyclic ops in general work? How do carrier quals work? How does fueling and arming work?
At night the planes go the a marshall stack and wait for their push time given by atc to start their descent for landing. During the day there is no marshall stack the planes fly over the ship longwise conduct a carrier break and land. Weather minimums play a big part whether it will be a cas 1,2, or 3 recovery. Plane guard launches and hovers off the starboard side of the ship within a mile or two during launch and recovery. It lands last after the last plane lands. Carrier qualification is just the squadron pilots getting required requal takeoffs and landings in order to be carrier qualified. Each one is required to get a specific number of day and night traps in order to fly onto and off the boat. Cyclic ops are the normal operations cycle of the ships daily events. There is a designated launch and recovery time posted on the flight schedule and the planes in that event launch, then the planes from the previous event recover. There is single cycle usually a 90 minute flight and double cycle which three hour flight. Usually you are either launching or recovering at a single time but my ship did something called flex deck when we had launches and recoveries happening at the same time. You use the bow cats to launch and recover on the angle. Refueling is usually done when the plane returns. There are a lot of factors involved to refuel such as will the plane launch the next event, is it located near a fuel station in range of a hose. Arming is done on the flight deck prior to the launch cycle then once the plane gets to the cat the weapons pins are pulled prior to launch.
@@ChadGatling mostly jets. Helos launch before the event and land at the end. They just liftoff from their landing spot on the angle and land there too.
@@michaeljohnson4258 Ahh ok, so helicopters just kinda hover in line and wait to get clearance and a landing area? I guess they just stay below 500 or something. You can't really have helicopters and jets recovering at the same time, i guess.
@@ChadGatling everything is coordinated in accordance with the CV NATOPS procedures manual. Try to find one on line since it is unclassified, it explains in great detail how things work. You also have the air boss and mini boss watching and if they see something they call it out. The helos have their procedures and the fixed wing have their procedures and they are kept separate but they interact. Everything is very coordinated and safely orchestrated
Gotta love the DCS clip at 6:50. And the various shots of the Viper throughout. I guess they didn't have enough stock footage and had to resort to showing AF planes and tankers?
Have you ever covered the VT19, T2 Buckeye crash on the USS Lexington back in the '80s? That was my squadron, I was an AME2 but was discharged in Jan '76. I didn't even know about it till almost 2000. I'm enjoying your videos. Semper Fortis
Had the privilege of spending two days and nights on the USS Kitty Hawk (CVA-63). As visitors, we were allotted the cabins just below the landing deck. It was the experience of a lifetime to have airplanes landing on the iron roof. And carrier "landings" are not landings. They are "controlled crashes." The airplanes keep descending, aiming to catch one of the arrestor wires. The lucky ones hit the deck at the right spot while the others have to quickly take off again for another attempt. To reduce the reaction time, they open full power just before touchdown.
Knew a diver who had been a Navy pilot. He commented that diving the "O" off Pensacola it looked huge, not what he remembered when trying to land on it
What do you find most impressive or surprising about nighttime aircraft carrier landings? Share your thoughts in the comments below!
⬇
Please note that some footage in this video is not recorded at night in order to better illustrate the landing process. We appreciate your understanding as we aim to provide a clear understanding of nighttime aircraft carrier landings. Thank you for your support! 💙
i served on two CVS carriers in the late sixties, twin engine, piston engine aircraft. The surprising thing is that reasonable, college educated, very capable young men risk it all to launch and recover time after time in good and bad weather. This when a part of their preparation is studying other young men who died doing the very same thing. When the aircraft are prepped, maintained and armed by men, many of whom, like me, were younger yet and had never touched an aircraft before enlisting.
It still goes on today, thank goodness!
"What do you find most impressive or surprising about nighttime aircraft carrier landings?"
I'm a PP and I'm impressed that they can do it at all, especially in rough seas or gusty conditions. Even tho the Carrier is aligned with the wind (and what if the wind gusts momentarily off center line?), gusts will increase and decrease your airspeed - must be a real nail biter! My hats off to 'em, but ain't it thrilling to watch? Would love to get a ride.
They keep using the same file film over and over again. F-16's???
Most impressive? That pilots are able to avoid disorientation and mental overload in that dynamic and high-risk environment. I suppose training and practice-practice-practice takes the edge off, but in the back of their minds pilots must sometimes think how wild it is that they are flying through the dark at a giant slab of steel.
Amazing; courage, skill, discipline, teamwork, and answered prayer. 🤔🙏🦅🇺🇸🌎🙂!
I spent 4 years on the carrier USS Constellation in the 70's working the flight deck as a power plant mechanic and plane captain. Night shift could be terrifying at times. Especially during a storm, pouring rain and high winds. Pilots had the ACLS system ( Automatic Carrier Landing System ) they could use it to land but they did not trust the " black box" to land the aircraft for them and would shut it off at the last second before hitting the deck. I had many a pilot climb out covered in sweat and shaking like a leaf after a poor landing in the dark. It was much harder for the rescue Helo's returning after the last plane was aboard to land. They were a very big part of night operations and should have been mentioned in your video. It could turn your hair white working nights for all of us.
I was with The Blue Diamonds of VA-146 on Constellation from '79 to '82.
First, thank you for your service. I was on the Constellation on July 4th 1977 as a member of the All Philadelphia Boys Choir. I believe it was off the coast of Singapore. You guys gave us a full tour of the ship, including the flight deck, fed us a fantastic lunch and treated us like like rockstars. We were in the middle of a world tour, and it was nice to be on American soil on the 4th of July. Thank you.
Difficult stuff is most appreciated!
Thank you NAVY!
☕😳
I was a radar tech on the USS Forrestal in 82, her last cruise before SLEP. While I was a search radar tech, the ILS and ACLS radars were in the same shop. My understanding at the time was that the ACLS radar we had would lock on around five miles out, put the aircraft on flight path, then return control to the pilot at one mile out, and the pilot put it on deck. I was told that technically, the radar could put the aircraft on deck, but we weren't certified to that level.
We actually lost an F4, and the pilot, during a night recovery that cruise. Came in low, clipped the deck, and broke up. I saw that immediate aftermath from "vulture's row" on the island, spot fires all over the flight deck from fantail to island. Since it was a night recovery, that meant our ACLS radar was involved, which resulted in investigators in our radar shop for a month, talking to techs and looking over maintenance records, etc. Final verdict was pilot error.
We also lost an F4 to a failed cat shot. That was daytime, so I was asleep for that one, but I saw the film. Port side bow cat, everything seems normal, then about halfway down there's a burst of steam and all the momentum dies. The F4 still left the deck, but it also immediately dropped into the sea. Lost that pilot, too, as I recall.
My late brother was a greenshirt on the Connie '72 to '73. Also, VA-146 (NAS LeMoore).
I served on the Nimitz in 1981 as an EOD tech and I witnessed many takeoffs and landings.
Unfortunately, I was also witness to a night-time crash firsthand. May God bless all my shipmates who did not survive that terrible night.
I assisted in the dry dock repairs and refabrication of the new class Nimitz and the Essex. Very beautiful aircraft carriers
Thank you for your service. I will never take it for granted.
Are you mentioning the crash were crew were killed and aircraft damaged? Navy covered it up
This was always downplayed in my experience
Cat 1,cv67
All I can say is it took balls of steel for the pilots to do any carrier landing day or night. I salute them.
Thank you for the compliment. But the courage remark is a little off in that it took such furious concentration that there was no place for anything else, even courage. -- Michael, Major, USMC and Naval Aviator
THIS is the most informative YT on Carrier Air Ops I've viewed. Well done.
Yeah, I spent 3 years of my life watching carrier landings ( and launches with full afterburners ) 6 hours a day or night night; in every kind of weather imaginable. Hot, humid, raining, freezing water and snow ( off North Korea ) and 85 foot waves in a typhoon ( no flight ops then ). Experience of a life time.
Thank you for your service. I will never take it for granted.
My first ever CO in a A7 squadron had a ramp strike during night flight ops during a storm; sheared off all landing gear and hook and slid over the wires and ejected, but wave action after he hit the water forced him against the ship and the propeller pulled him through where the water was about 10000+ feet; the pilot and plane were never recovered, only pieces of the chute. Many other pilots that had landed prior to him said they just missed having the same thing happen and said the deck was rising and falling about 20 feet! I had only been in the reserve squadron for a couple of months and had just met most of the pilots on a couple of drill weekends and squadron picnic prior to the 2 week deployment.
Semper Fortis!
Great courage to work those decks, everybody involved. 🙏
I went on board a CVA 60 years ago. Even then, how they got onboard at night was pretty amazing. Naval aviators ahve my utmost respect.
I was onboard CVA-60 (USS SARATOGA) for 4 years as an ACLS electronics tech (ET2) for the SPN-42 and it amazed me every day & night !!!
More accurate and informative than most. With 2 exceptions:
1. Every recovery has dedicated organic tankers overhead (in other words, aircraft from the boat configured as tankers). Aircraft requiring tanking during a recovery will always tank from those Navy recovery tankers. The video show Air Force tankers (and even Air Force aircraft refueling), especially in the beginning of the video. Naval aircraft do tank off of heavy Air Force tankers, but it's most often on the way to/from a mission or overland . . . never as part of a recovery. The standard around the boat for recovery tanking is "plugged and receiving" within 90 seconds of a bolter - that is never going to happen on an Air Force tanker at typical Air Force tanker altitudes. The Carrier Air Wing trains specifically for this - in fact it's one of the checks in the box they have to demonstrate before deployment certification.
2. The video implies that a carrier arrested landing consists of separate sensations of touching down, a split second where you're waiting for the deceleration, then deceleration in your straps, the head, then your whole body. This is how people imagine carrier landings who don't have carrier landings. It's what I assumed before my first carrier landing.
It's not correct.
When my parents asked me what it felt like, I told them "Get in your car and accelerate to about 40 miles per hour. Then drive it into a tree. While soiling yourself." You wouldn't feel the bumper hit the tree, then notice the hood start to crumple, then the seatbelt digging in, etc. You would experience it all at once. It's the same for arrested landings - one moment you are flying, the next moment it feels like you crashed into a brick wall. Everything in the cockpit surges forward at the same time - hopefully into some kind of restraint. The tires hitting the deck (750 feet per minute vertical deceleration), and the hook catching the wire and resulting horizontal deceleration (150 mph to zero in 2 seconds) are both felt simultaneously and instantly. It's an overwhelming shock at first, but you get used to it after a while.
Even if the hook just misses a wire (leaving the longest possible distance of about 50 feet before the next wire), at landing speeds it's still less than the blink of an eye (not a figure of speech - we're talking small fractions of a second) for the hook to cross to the next wire and catch it. Imperceptible for a pilot.
If a carrier pilot notices touchdown without the "crashing into a wall" sensation, they already know they missed the wire and will be airborne again in the next few seconds.
But the rest of this video is pretty good!
I would have happily asked you to sign that line item for my AW qual, great explanation.
Thanks for addressing the refueling. I was wondering how it's possible to fly up to tanker altitude (assuming a tanker was nearby) if you don't have enough fuel to circle around for another landing attempt.
Spent 4 years of my life on Carriers. I miss the fun, and excitement, but not other things.
I hear you. Being on a Carrier is an amazing experience but it depends upon your job. If I could have done it my way I'd have been a Corpsman....that was mos' def a non stress job and the Flips who worked in the Officer's Mess would always bring you steaks and the good chow that the officers got to eat. Enlisted mess was awful and today I wouldn't feed that crap to my dogs. I'd feed it to my pigs though, if I had any.
Respect to all naval aviators , operational crew, a privilege to see this, thank you
Forgot the Marines, Part of the NAVY.
I was approved in early 90's to enter the NAVCAD from the United States Airforce and ended up getting a medical disqualification just past the halfway point through the training and was reassigned back to my Airforce unit where I was subsequently medically discharged. I will always be supportive of Naval Aviation. Thank you for sharing this video. Hope this inspires young aviators to get involved. with Naval Aviation. I am still a pilot to this day. Just never could do it for the Navy but I was at least approved to try and gave it my best and learned to be a decent pilot as a result of the training I got.
If we're talking Navy Aviation, why are there occasional pics of F16.'s in this video?
I saw a F-22 also…
why f-16s, lazy, whinning millenials produced this video.
Obvious error. Along with any other Air Force scenes.
F-15s, too. I wonder if this is really a US Navy production.
I used to fly navy F-16’s off of the uss Ronald Regan during the Korean War bud. That’s why there’s f-16’s In the video.
I am a pilot. Was a crew chief on a UH1D & UH1H in Vietnam 06/69 - 06/70. It ignited my passion for flight and later in life I learned to fly. Fantastic experience! I very quickly learned, in my opinion, that Naval pilots are the best in the world. I have tremendous admiration for them and the skill they had to have...along with balls of steel. Thank you for what you do!
My boss was a Naval Aviator. His recollection of his very first carrier landing was dominated by his reviewing the status of his life insurance while on the downwind leg of the pattern. That focus instantly transitioned to ONLY aircraft location and attitude when he assumed final. He obviously survived but ended up in P3 sub chasers after all the drama of successful carrier landings. I was a dry-land pilot and have a great admiration and respect for all Naval Aviators! Thanks to each of you for your incredible service!
I was on the Enterprise when she blew up in the Hawaiian Operating area. I was blown into the nets and busted both ear drums. Not a pretty site. We lost something like 134 brave men. I made it out with minor wounds.
Outstanding Episode! Best I've seen on YT. Thank You Sir!
Where can you find pleasure, search the world for treasure
Learn science technology?
Where can you begin to make your dreams all come true
On the land or on the sea?
Where can you learn to fly, play in sports and skin dive
Study oceanography?
Sign off for the big band or sit in the grandstand
When your team and others meet
In the navy
Yes, you can sail the seven seas
In the navy
Yes, you can put your mind at ease
In the navy
Come on people, fall an' make a stand
In the navy, in the navy
Can't you see we need a hand
In the navy
Come on, protect the motherland
In the navy
Come on and join your fellow man
In the navy
Come on people and make a stand
In the navy, in the navy, in the navy, oh
They want you, they want you
They want you as a new recruit
If you like adventure, don't you wait to enter
The recruiting office fast
Don't you hesitate, there is no need to wait
They're signing up new seamen fast
Maybe you are too young to join up today
But don't you worry 'bout a thing
For I'm sure there will be always a good navy
Protecting the land and sea
In the navy
Yes, you can sail the seven seas
In the navy
Yes, you can put your mind at ease
In the navy
Come on people, fall an' make a stand
In the navy, in the navy
Can't you see we need a hand
In the navy
Come on, protect the motherland
In the navy
Come on and join your fellow man
In the navy
Come on people and make a stand
In the navy, in the navy, in the navy, in the navy
They want you, they want you
They want you as a new recruit
Who me?
They want you, they want you
They want you as a new recruit
But, but, but, I'm afraid of water
Hey, hey look man
I get seasick even watchin' it on TV
They want you, they want you in the navy
Oh my goodness
They want you
What am I gonna do in a submarine?
They want you
They want you, they want you in the navy
In the navy
Yes, you can sail the seven seas
In the navy
Yes, you can put your mind at ease
In the navy
Come on people, fall in make a stand
In the navy, in the navy
Can't you see we need a hand
In the navy
Come on, protect the motherland
In the navy
Come on and join your fellow man
In the navy
Come on people and make
1979, flashback ! #2 after YMCA.
@@charletonzimmerman4205
Songs pop in my head all the time.
Sometimes for no particular reason.
I so appreciate these brave men who protect all of us! Landing at night must be nerve-wracking. Thank you.
For the most part this is pretty good. Brought back lots of memories. However, your mix of Air Force aircraft is confusing (especially the several clips of an F-16). And what’s with the two short segments of the MiG-29 in formation? You also have several segments where the video is transposed like you are looking thru a mirror. There are also some scenes which appear to be a shore based facility. We don’t wear short sleeves at sea (fire protection). And we don’t wear civilian attire unless we are leaving the ship to go on liberty. The video should have been scrubbed better by someone familiar with carrier aviation.
A very nice video and your "small glimpse " in this fascinating world is by far the best in YT in explaining all aspects of dangers, worries and operations above, on and below the flight deck. As a veteran conventional submariner I am highly impressed by the guts of those pilots. Love it
I flew model planes as a teen and watched this video twice, I’m ready.
Go get 'em, tiger!
I have the utmost respect for these pilots and every person on the boat guiding and supporting their safe landing. Thanks and prayers 🙏 for all of you.
As a civilian Part 121 Flight Dispatcher @ 5:40 is why naval aviators are absolute bosses in my book.
Had a chance to jumpseat with a CA who flew in the first desert storm, who happened to be training a FO moving into the left seat.
FO was WAY high on the approach and the training CA immediately snapped into action
*"My airplane !!!"*
That had to be about 5 years ago, but I'll never forget it.
✈
Enjoyed the video, thanks. Brought back memories of my night carrier landings 50+ years ago with a lot less electronic "gewizz" landing aids...almost none in the A-4 Skyhawk. One nit, we would drop the hook upon entering holding overhead (day) or marshal (night); so as not to forget!
I got thousand hours in the skyhawk. USMC f4 dude. Vt 21
@@patfarra627 Pat You should check out joining the A-4 Skyhawk Association, we have a great quarterly journal and luncheon meeting at Tailhook every year. I am on the Board of Directors. We have equal Marine and Navy Directors. And our present President is a Marine. Semper Fi! Pete
I used to always say "The best time to drop the hook . . . is when you happen to be thinking about dropping the hook". Minimal drag penalty and totally worth it to not be "that guy" (which I was . . . one time only).
I went on a hop and had one of the most memorable experiences of my life! It was a daylight flight and we did inflight refueling! There was a time I thought we would crash!
Well the pilot had to take a dump and sat in the 4th seat did his business on some paper maps that got tossed out the hatch before landing!
I was just telling my girlfriend how crazy night operations are in the middle of the North Sea. I was stationed on the USS Little Rock (1971-72) and got a great view. Your video helps me understand what was going on. I was amazed at how many missed landings there were.
I spent four years aboard USS Independence in VA-66 A7E Waldo's in 72-75. I was an electronics troubleshooter working mostly at night. It's dangerous enough during normal landings and it Really gets hairy in rough seas with rain and a pitching deck of around 20 feet plus. With the wind across the deck, blowing rain, pitching deck and trying to maintain balance on a oil slick wet deck is treacherous, the pilots had a lot of guts to land the planes under these conditions.
Great post, Mike! I was also on the Indy 72-75. I was attached to VS-31 Topcats. Was AE troubleshooter at night launches. Had to keep your head out of your ass, for sure!
The UK invented the Optical Landing System that plays a big part in this
Not to mention the offset deck too 🇬🇧
I spent four years on the USS Forrestal CVA-59. I was a gunners mate in the Ship's Armory.
Fair Winds and Following Seas shipmates from a retired OS1. I was stationed on USS Semmes DDG 18 1983-84. Provided Plane Guard for USS America CV 66 in 1983 in the Caribbean.
I'm a retired Navy Air Traffic Controller. Spent time of 5 carriers. Best job I ever had, except the chow lines!!!
Thanks!
The Royal Navy developed the angled flight deck...and the catch wires...
Well done for reminding everyone who dunnit first.
Navy Productions showing Air Force F16's. Funny.
Thanks for the video.
As a VS 23 aircrewman on the USS Yorktown I was on 100+ carrier landings. Night, single engine, storms, rolling deck and still vertical at 81. Go Navy!
That's an incredible video! I loved it. I have so much respect for pilots. They're a skilled bunch of people. Thanks for sharing this video.
you know, showing an F16 refueling while describing carrier operations is not helpful, as the technologies involved are different. eg: navy aircraft typically use drogue basket and probe, while the air force typically uses a boom from the supplying tanker. at around 3:18 or so, we see the air force style of refueling, but the entire video is about the *navy*, so it would be better to show the *navy* method of refueling. there are also multiple instances where a close-up is provided of an F16, while the wide view is that of an F/A-18, and even some shots of russian aircraft. very strangely assembled video clips.
This is so amazing .... I'm just glad it is on our side!
WOW, I've always thought these pilots are without any doubt amazing. My god I was tense just listening to the process. I can respect the fact it must become second nature but never just another landing.
I've talked to pilots an asked what are you thinking...? " I hear my heart beating and say do not let me down". Depending on the Glide scope angle it looks like they will fly right over you.... until the hit the deck in front of you.
As a Civilian, I saw the John F Kennedy. I was totally blown away by its size and by comparison, she is not the largest. After watching this video, I am so impressed with the nerve and skills of the Naval Aviator.
This must be the most intense of human effort in precision on many levels ...
At night with no devert (No place to go ) , "It's your life". As I said above, I'm Home".
God bless America and the men and women willing to sacrifice everything to protect it.
Served on the Carl Vinson and Kittyhawk while belonging to VF 51 Screaming Eagles Miramar California. Top gun. Go, Navy.
CVN-71 V-2 Gear dog here! Great video, seen plenty of traps
I was on board the U.S.S. Midway from 1980 -1983 , the last cruise in late 82 as a flight deck trouble shooter for VF-151. We had one pilot who was not able to land at night. The ops usually had him land last, after having to bingo(divert) to a nearby field for the 4th or 5th time he sadly transferred to a ground base for retraing. I never found out if was ever on a carrier again.
We also took on 2 F-14s from the Enterprise because of rough seas. And boy were they rough, we almost lost an A -6 over the bow because a use of a wave, boke almost all 16 tie-diwns. If we weren't still recovering she would have pitched off the bow.
I never knew it was that dangerous. 🙏
I was out in that kind of stuff too, VF-41, 1970-1974. Lots of Med and North Atlantic cruises through some very rough seas. I couldn't figure out why the USN would run a Carrier full of expensive aircraft into that kind of thing, rather than divert to calmer seas until these things passed. We got caught in a Killer Storm in the Bay of Biscay off the west coast of France, back in '73, I think and it was pure hell with everything flooding, and being thrown around. Then, on the same cruise coming home immediatly after all that damage we foundered for 3 days in the Triangle in a horrible storm. I loved watching air ops from the 07 level and I saw a lot of flight accidents and a couple of deaths.
That was a pretty good narration. The visuals.... spectacular.
So basically most of the problems come from trying to squeeze in a few sorties before the storm gets there. Then the storm gets there faster anyway. Navy pilots must age really fast.
Wow! Someone snuck a F8 Crusader into the mix. Gotta be close to 40 years or more since a F8 landed on a carrier during ops.
Thanks for an awesome video. Feel the need for speed, Go Navy! Incredible the number of people that must do their jobs correctly to make this Navy run correctly. JOB WELL DONE to the senior enlisted and officers that ensure that the quality control is maintained.
Old carrier sailor here (CVA-42). Good to see the advancement and also the similar techniques in use. Bravo Zulu to all the Naval Aviators.
Fixed wing guys are adorable. They have an entire ship filled with crew and tech to help them get on the ground safely. Meanwhile the chopper guys are landing in zero illumination in full brownout conditions while being shot at (and hit) on nearly every mission.
I’m curious why the F35 is catching the wire when it’s a VSTOL aircraft and can just gently set down on deck saving the airframe a lot of unnecessary stress ?
F35-C is the Navy variant. It is not STOVL. F35-B is STOVL, but a vertical landing can't be done if over a certain weight. Also, I'm sure you have to do wired landings to be carrier certified. I could be wrong about that when it comes to USMC, as they fly the B variant.
What a great video! Such an impressive task. I was totally astonished at the sight of carrier ops aboard the Eisenhower and Forrestal as a reservist. Our pilots only flew during the day and that was SO impressive seeing the ordered chaos on the flight deck.
I was ship's company as an ET in the radar shop on the USS Forrestal CV-59 back in 82. I was in charge of the ship's long range air search radar. Our shop was two work centers, one for search (SPS) radars, one for air navigation (SPN) radars.
While I never directly worked with the SPN side, I worked with the people that did. My understanding of the ACLS radar we had back then, was that it would take control of the aircraft at about 5 miles out, putting it on the flight path, then return control to the pilot at 1 mile out, leaving it to the pilot to actually put the plane on deck (or not). I was told that the equipment could, in theory at least, actually land the plane itself, but this is how we were certified to operate.
We lost two F4s on that cruise, one failed catapult launch, one failed recovery. The cat failure was daytime, and I was night crew, so I only saw the video. Those cameras they mentioned here that let you see the flight operations? That was on every TV set on the ship. We watched it in our radar shop, which is where I saw the video of the cat failure. A burst of steam halfway through the launch, followed by the F4 just sort of falling off the bow.
The failed recovery was a night recovery, so under ACLS, and resulted in our radar shop being investigated. That F4 came in low and caught the round down. Broke up into lots of pieces, scattering debris and spot fires all over the flight deck aft of the island. Someone came into our radar shop (in the island) yelling about it and we all went out to vulture's row to see.
So, we had investigators in our shop for days afterwards, poring over our maintenance records for the ACLS radar, interviewing the techs, etc. Ultimate ruling was pilot error.
The TACAN mentioned here is a beacon. I was tech for the one we had on my second ship, a frigate (USS Vreeland FF-1068). For our use on the frigate, it was just a homing beacon to tell the helo (the only thing we carried) how to find us. It will generally be the antenna at the very top of the ship's mast.
When I was first aboard the Forrestal, during workups before that 82 Med/IO cruise, I had a brand new 35mm camera. So, flight ops being "new" to me, I spent a bunch of time on vulture's row taking pictures. Turned out, the camera body was bad, so the whole roll of film was wasted. When we left on the cruise, I had the replacement body, so a good camera. But, by this point, flight ops was so "normal", I just kept thinking, I'll get to it eventually. Actually had to force myself out to take pictures towards the end of that cruise.
And, I'm glad I did. I have a very good picture of a recovery, zoomed in on the tailhook, which is just about to catch the wire.
Perfect example of a ship we don't need many of anymore
Since you asked for comments, here it is-- over fifty years ago, when I did it, I got my traps. We got lots of practice first and we were ready. The formula is "Meatball, Lineup, Angle of Attack". Then when the landing gear hit the deck, go to full power and retract the speed brakes. That way, if you get a hook skip or another cause of bolter, you're set up to fly off and come around again. If you get a wire the taxi director will come out and give a cut signal and hook retraction before directing to the spot.
Thank you for letting me reminisce.
I served on the Lexington, green vest. It is an Incredible experience to be and work on the Fly deck. Great memories... IT WAS AN HONOR TO SERVE... GOD BLESS THE USA.
I launched VT-22 TA-4 Skyhawks to the USS Lexington CV-16 Blue Ghost 83-84 from NAS Key West. Our home was NAS Kingsville, TX.
Plane guard for Abe back in about 1995. I was Canadian Navy and watching them doing night traps, amazing, one highlight of my career
I was on the Abe in 95 until Aug when I flew off to Bahrain going home.
I AM A NON - MILITARY , COMMERCIAL PILOT ... WATCHING THIS EXCELLENT VIDEO , HAS GIVEN ME A HEADACHE ! !
Thank you all for your service to our USA!!! Be kind to each other. Watch your six
Very well done and professional. CONGRATS!
Great video with great commentary. 👍🏼 Got my SUB.
Great job guys!😊
I have witnessed many carrier landings. FLY NAVY.
I was with VF-41 aboard USS Franklin D. Roosevelt (CVA-42) from 1970-74. I worked in the Ready Room a great deal but I was a Personnelman and spent a lot of time behind a typewriter typing and retyping enlisted evals. I berthed below the flight deck, directly under the #2 wire and our office was directly below the starboard cat. I hated being a PN, it was a useless and dead end job, boring as hell, but I did finally come around, ignored the redundancy of the job and after a couple of years I began to enjoy my term of service. I knew a lot of great pilots, many of whom have died early and I would suspect that being a Navy pilot had something to shorten their life spans. But, being with a Fighter Squadron was a great experience and there isn't a day that passes that I don't ruminate a little on those days and remember my old shipmates.
I flew the A-7 onboard the Ike for 2 deployments in the 80's. Flying at night under an overcast sky was like flying in a black sphere. The carrier was a speck of light. Add a driving rain and a pitching deck and game on. Coming to a stop onboard I at times told God, OK, thank you, I've got it from here.
Mixing in Air Force planes? What the frog?
18 of my 24 Year Career in the Navy. Over 1350 Traps. Miss it everyday.
A F14 Pilot (afaik) told the story where his RIO, after a successful bad weather Case III, got out of the cockpit and asked him "Don't you want to get out?" and the pilot was like "Yeah, when my knees stop shaking"
No questions. Had a family member serve on the Big E during WW2.
amazing, just amazing
What the hell has an F16 have to do with this ? NOTHING !
Didn’t you know about the Navalized F16?! 😂
@@keirfarnum6811 Actually, there is an F-16N. We used them for adversaries at TOPGUN. They had an Air Force style "land hook" though, so no carrier landings.
There were F-15s shown in formation, too. I wonder if this is really a U.S. Navy production.
And nothing said about night landings.
Nice video, Thanks to All Enlisted Men and Women in The US Navy,…The Back Bone of the Greatest Navy in the World, BRAVO ZULU!
Very good video. Thank you.
Carrier pilots are the best in the world.
Great video of carrier opps.
Thanks for clearing that up…I’ve always heard of case 1 and case 3 but never case 2
Great Movie, , 🙂🙏👍🇸🇪
Can you also tell us more about the navy, not just aircraft carriers?
To me, an EmCon Case lll Recovery in weather with a pitching deck, Blue Water Ops on a black-ass night, well executed by the air wing, is the height of professionalism and the most demanding task in all of Naval Aviation.
Marshall stack or martial stack?
Marshall stack like the famous amplifiers
@@koobuck that's what I as a civilian thought, but I figured it might be the other word since it was the military.
Yepi can see that I think they were just trying to be cheeky
✈✈✈10,000 likes. Great video.✈✈✈
Nice video!!
As a DCS F/A-18C pilot, I concur that carrier landings are very stressful and difficult. VR pilots have a much easier time than TrackIR pilots though, as they have more depth of field sense than the other.
You're a gamer, not a pilot.
I would really love to learn about this same process but for helicopters? Is there a marshaling and recovery process for them? What does it look like? How does Plane Guard work? How does cyclic ops in general work? How do carrier quals work? How does fueling and arming work?
At night the planes go the a marshall stack and wait for their push time given by atc to start their descent for landing. During the day there is no marshall stack the planes fly over the ship longwise conduct a carrier break and land. Weather minimums play a big part whether it will be a cas 1,2, or 3 recovery. Plane guard launches and hovers off the starboard side of the ship within a mile or two during launch and recovery. It lands last after the last plane lands. Carrier qualification is just the squadron pilots getting required requal takeoffs and landings in order to be carrier qualified. Each one is required to get a specific number of day and night traps in order to fly onto and off the boat. Cyclic ops are the normal operations cycle of the ships daily events. There is a designated launch and recovery time posted on the flight schedule and the planes in that event launch, then the planes from the previous event recover. There is single cycle usually a 90 minute flight and double cycle which three hour flight. Usually you are either launching or recovering at a single time but my ship did something called flex deck when we had launches and recoveries happening at the same time. You use the bow cats to launch and recover on the angle. Refueling is usually done when the plane returns. There are a lot of factors involved to refuel such as will the plane launch the next event, is it located near a fuel station in range of a hose. Arming is done on the flight deck prior to the launch cycle then once the plane gets to the cat the weapons pins are pulled prior to launch.
@@michaeljohnson4258 Oh nice thanks. Is that landing info for helicopters or jets?
@@ChadGatling mostly jets. Helos launch before the event and land at the end. They just liftoff from their landing spot on the angle and land there too.
@@michaeljohnson4258 Ahh ok, so helicopters just kinda hover in line and wait to get clearance and a landing area? I guess they just stay below 500 or something. You can't really have helicopters and jets recovering at the same time, i guess.
@@ChadGatling everything is coordinated in accordance with the CV NATOPS procedures manual. Try to find one on line since it is unclassified, it explains in great detail how things work. You also have the air boss and mini boss watching and if they see something they call it out. The helos have their procedures and the fixed wing have their procedures and they are kept separate but they interact. Everything is very coordinated and safely orchestrated
Gotta love the DCS clip at 6:50. And the various shots of the Viper throughout. I guess they didn't have enough stock footage and had to resort to showing AF planes and tankers?
So 30 seconds before the end you show the night landings ..
Where does the night landing starrt?
At night!
Have you ever covered the VT19, T2 Buckeye crash on the USS Lexington back in the '80s? That was my squadron, I was an AME2 but was discharged in Jan '76. I didn't even know about it till almost 2000. I'm enjoying your videos. Semper Fortis
There are no military people I respect more than naval aviators and that includes my own beloved Green Berets!
Catapulting like a rocket. Fantastic
Had the privilege of spending two days and nights on the USS Kitty Hawk (CVA-63).
As visitors, we were allotted the cabins just below the landing deck. It was the experience of a lifetime to have airplanes landing on the iron roof. And carrier "landings" are not landings. They are "controlled crashes." The airplanes keep descending, aiming to catch one of the arrestor wires. The lucky ones hit the deck at the right spot while the others have to quickly take off again for another attempt. To reduce the reaction time, they open full power just before touchdown.
could you show some info about Helm responsibilities
Thanks
I was on the Ike cvn69 for 3
years ams3 at night final checker/troubleshooter I loved it! It was a very long time ago
ago
I was shocked at how small a carrier tower is after touring the USS Midway museum in San Diego, CA!
Knew a diver who had been a Navy pilot. He commented that diving the "O" off Pensacola it looked huge, not what he remembered when trying to land on it
Excellent narative
Brilliant