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2012 in review
The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2012 annual report for this blog.
Here’s an excerpt:
19,000 people fit into the new Barclays Center to see Jay-Z perform. This blog was viewed about 96,000 times in 2012. If it were a concert at the Barclays Center, it would take about 5 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.
The Twelve Days of Gripen: Day 12
The Twelve Days of Gripen: Day 11
MY FAVOURITE AEROPLANE IN 200 WORDS #20 SEPECAT Jaguar by Bryce Gillam
Until that day I hated low-flying aircraft. Like many I saw them as a reminder of how daft the English are.
I was not the best-looking boy in my village (or even in my house as my dad kindly reminds me). I was a straggly half-hearted Mod.
Lowri  lived two streets down from me and was so good-looking I wasn’t sure if I had the right to speak to her.
When I did, it felt a little naughty, like drawing a knob on the Wailing Wall or making a lion wear a bobble-hat. How dare I waste her time? So it came as an unbelievably wonderful surprise when on the 30th June 1986, me and Lowri had sex.
Afterwards we had a post-coital beer and gazed down the hills that led to Dolgellau. As the first sip met my lips, a Jaguar gambolled through the valleys. It was as joyful as I was and surfed from side-to-side like a marble on a helter-skelter.
Since then, I love the Jaguar jet (so much so, that I even travelled to London in 2010, to see Fiona Banner’s show, which featured one offering its belly to be tickled).
Bryce Gillam is an illustrator who has yet to finish his website. His other failures include being a stand-up comedian without a booking agent.
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HUSH-KIT EXCLUSIVE: Does the RAF have faith in Typhoon?
My exposure to Typhoon comes from RAF sources, some at the very highest level. I’m aware that what I’m hearing may be biased, but I’ve found the old adage that every fighter pilot believes his fighter is the best, simply isn’t true. Fighter pilots know the weaknesses of their own aircraft and the advantages that they have over their adversaries, these are basics for survival in combat.
What I’m hearing is that in the air-to-air arena, especially with the HMS and Meteor, but even now, without the missile, the more experienced guys and girls on Typhoon would happily fly against anything and expect minimal losses. They are very, very confident. No one, on or off record, has said anything less than the superlative about Typhoon. I’ve been told that the aircraft is extremely powerful, with sufficient excess power to cope with planned upgrades. Hanging weapons on the jet makes little difference to its performance, while dropping them is imperceptible – except for the weapon symbol disappearing off the weapon screen.
Pilots use the throttles carefully so as not to push the aircraft supersonic by accident. Typhoons were often called over Sirte to ‘drop a boom’ just to let the bad guys know they were there and to reassure the good guys. ‘The Tornado can do that too, but it’s much easier for us.’
Typhoon has apparently been comprehensively ‘beaten’ in DACT by Rafale and Pakistani F-16s. Accepting this as fact, but taking it at face value is naïve. Without knowing the ‘cuffs’ imposed on those engagements it is difficult to assess their results with any real understanding. It is also the case that the RAF flies its Typhoons for airframe life, rather than extreme, ragged-edge-of-envelope performance. That’s not to say that such performance isn’t there, but it is telling that in regular training RAF pilots take Typhoon out to 9g. On the face of it, not such an impressive claim – USAF F-15A pilots were doing that in the 1980s – but Typhoon has the power and pilot support systems to go out to 9g and stay there, as a matter of course. And that’s when it’s being flown conservatively.
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JG Ballard reviews The Spectacle of Flight: Aviation and the Western Imagination 1920-1950 by Robert Wohl
A wonderful book reviewed by a wonderful writer:
The Spectacle of Flight: Aviation and the Western Imagination 1920-1950
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2005/may/07/history.highereducation








