Avro Vulcan
Today XH558 returned to Lincolnshire for the first time in 15 years.
My dad and I drove over to Tattershall Bridge after collecting my brother from school, and we got a great view as she did a flypast and landed at RAF Coningsby
photos here
did anyone else in this part of the world see her?
My dad and I drove over to Tattershall Bridge after collecting my brother from school, and we got a great view as she did a flypast and landed at RAF Coningsby
photos here
did anyone else in this part of the world see her?
Post edited by guesser on
Comments
I'm from Lincolnshire, brings back memories of seeing them fly back in the 70's and 80's
Not many jets make a distinct sound like that.
indeed, can't wait for the airshow season :D
hope it gets a sponsor of course!
Coningsby's just down the road really, so hopefully we can get ourselves to the front of the crowd and have a butchers next time she takes off
The Vulcan has an exemplary record. I think you're thinking of the Valiant, which when it was repurposed into a low level bomber, suffered from fatal metal fatigue from low level turbulence (the Vulcan and Victor never suffered these problems. The Victor was eventually repurposed as an air-to-air refueller, but the Vulcan remained a bomber).
The Vulcan was used only once in anger, the Black Buck missions against the Argentine occupation of the Falklands. At the time, it was the world's longest range bombing missions on record. Militarily, they didn't do an awful lot of damage - the damage they did was entirely to Argentinian strategy - it caused them to not base many aircraft in the Falklands, meaning the Harrier pilots had a huge advantage (the Argentine jets, having to operate from Argentina had very limited time they could engage British forces). Sometimes a military victory isn't about what you blow up, but what strategy changes you force your enemy to make.
yeah thats it, i looked the vulcan up and it didn't look like the one i saw on tv.
edit, its not that either, i'll ask the RAF guy i know, it'd prolly be easier if i describe it for him.
the Nimrod? that's a redesigned DH Comet airliner, the comets had a metal fatigue problem which caused crashes, and the RAF plane, the nimrod is getting old and knackered* and one crashed recently...
the RAF have had a few rubbish planes so it's hard to guess which one you mean :)
*as is happening to all the RAF's planes unfortunately, hence the way we are shedding types all the time. (you could easily list the types we have in operation, and it's not a long list)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_active_United_Kingdom_military_aircraft
look how many are transports and trainers :)
On the whole though, I'm more of a Victor fan. I wonder if we'll ever see one of them flying again?
heh, that it does, with that huge round front and all those windows :-)