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Elevation. Altitude. Height. Not the same.That's a good point. You would think that with all the technology in these super machines nowadays, this altitude setting should be something the aircraft's sensors can pick up and the software automatically sets it. Shouldn't be a manual thing anymore I would think.
F-4M Radio altitude indicator.
Elevation. Altitude. Height. Not the same.
- Elevation is how high the LOCAL terrain is above mean sea level. An airport has a local elevation. If you to the beach and stand on a rock, you have a local elevation of X centimeters above MSL.
- Altitude is how much a body is above MSL. That 'much' is calibrated to read meters, kilometers, miles, or whatever method you want.
- Height is how much a body is above LOCAL terrain. So if you are at an airport that is 10 meters over MSL, you have zero height. Unless you want to count your shoe's lift. This measurement is usually call 'above ground level' or AGL.
Mount Everest is 29,029 ft in elevation. So if you fly at altitude of 29,030 ft, momentarily you will have an AGL of 1 ft as you fly over the peak. It is up to YOU to make that height compensation. Whether you make that compensation in your head or with a device, that is still a manual compensation. The word 'manual' in this context mean the human, not electronic devices.
Is there an automatic method ? Yes, the radar altimeter.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radar_altimeter
But by design, a radar altimeter points towards the ground and by that same design, its utility is restrictive -- TO/L.
https://www.thebalance.com/basic-flight-instruments-the-altimeter-282608
http://aviation.watergeek.eu/f4m-panel.html
The maneuvers that are executed at airshows -- whether you are a civilian or military pilot -- are the same as in combat. And in combat, you usually do not fly at airshows AGL. You rely almost exclusively on the main altitude indicator. So, if local compensation is not input-ed, you will have a disaster.
What a terrible person you are..... making fun of the death of this man.Let us hope all NATO pilots are as skilled as this pilot was.
What a terrible person you are..... making fun of the death of this man.
Nope.... its a guy.... regardless my point still stands, not cool to cheer death at all.Female pilot not a male pilot.
Nope.... its a guy.... regardless my point still stands, not cool to cheer death at all.
The height was inadequate, failed stunt.
Gabriele Orlandi
There's been some confusion as the the gender of the pilot because of the name, but he was a 10 year veteran of the Italian Air Force.
Not that I'm an expert, that was my reaction at first but when I watched it again and thought about it more and from all the flight demos I've seen through the years and many airshows and videos, it looks more to me like his airspeed was a bit excessive which makes the radius of the loop bigger. Maybe if his airspeed was a bit slower, he might've been able to fit the loop in the space he had? If you watch that Rafale video I posted and that Split-S at the end, take a look at the airspeed of the Rafale as he turns and points down. He slows down quite a bit. And with these delta/canard platforms, you see these guys turning much tighter turns especially at lower speeds.
With that high rate of speed and momentum + gravity, maybe if he pulled back on the throttle a little bit he might've pulled out of it?