
After 25 seconds things get interesting, and from 0.38 onwards downright frightening...

More details through http://theaviationist.com/2012/10/19/close-call-e3/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

I don't think it entirely the E3 pilot's fault. Looks to me like the auto-pilot kicked out and the KC-135 dropped towards the E-3.Hustler72 wrote:wow, I think there are 2 lucky crews there. Not sure what the E3 pilot was thinking??,in my opinion i have always thought the RAF method to be safer than the flying boom but at the end of the day both crews came home.
The KC-135 doesn't move until after the E-3 does its whoopsy, that near disaster was entirely on the side of the E-3... However, thats not to blame the E-3 crew, it may well have been a technical fault?MikeB wrote:I don't think it entirely the E3 pilot's fault. Looks to me like the auto-pilot kicked out and the KC-135 dropped towards the E-3.
My comment was on the theory of what Stig has said, however the bow wave is known to kick the auto pilot out. To me looking at the sky in the top left and the horizon, it looks like the KC-135 moves up then down, and then receiver pulls away.Dazza37 wrote:The KC-135 doesn't move until after the E-3 does its whoopsy, that near disaster was entirely on the side of the E-3... However, thats not to blame the E-3 crew, it may well have been a technical fault?MikeB wrote:I don't think it entirely the E3 pilot's fault. Looks to me like the auto-pilot kicked out and the KC-135 dropped towards the E-3.
-Dazza
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