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[Watch]The Only Footage Of An F-14 Tomcat Catching The Wire ~

Man I Miss These Planes!

We have to admit, when we found this video we were plenty excited. The combination of the plane, navy and slow motion is just something we’ve never seen before and it brought back a lot of memories.

First off, landing a plane on a carrier is always a pleasure to watch. U.S. naval aviators are the best in the world, and seeing them catch the wire is awesome. If you’ve ever served on a carrier or had the chance to be aboard one through some program, you know exactly what we’re talking about. 

Secondly, the plane. Seeing an F-14 Tomcat like that is truly nostalgic. Retired in 2006, our new sailors never got the chance to see this fighter in action. With its variable swept wings and rigid airframe, this baby was just work of art.

Then there’s the slow motion. This video gets down and dirty to show you how the plane behaved when it landed. The whole frame is sturdy and absorbs the massive impact like it should. After watching this, click on the link below it to and see how a Russian navy plane behaves. Not designed for carrier use and just retrofitted, the frame and gears behave completely differently. 



Landing In The Most Extreme Elements

Top Gun 2 Two

Attempted Landing in extreme elements. Attempt is filmed during a test of the new MH-60 Seahawk around the Faroe Islands, where a Danish and an Australian test pilot would find the restrictions for when it’s safe to land on the Danish patrol vessels. The deck is bowing severely…


Now THAT’s A short takeoff for a giant! Nice!

FYI: Ilopango International Airport (ICAO: MSSS) is an airport located on the eastern part of the city of San Salvador, El Salvador.




This incredible footage shows the moment a small plane crashes into the ocean off the California coast – before a pilot and his passenger on board filmed their own rescue while being stung by jelly fish and treading water. 

Pilot Owen Leipelt filmed as his friend’s plane hit the water off Half Moon Bay 

He alerted air traffic control and kept circling above the crash scene on Tuesday

In the water below, the pilot of the downed plane, David Lesh, was also filming

He captured the moment his plane sank before filming his rescue from the water

Both Lesh and his female passenger were rescued unharmed by the coast guard

Pictures show the plane sinking and the two survivors as the helicopter arrives

The two survivors even seem in good spirits, laughing and joking in the water  

The friends had left from Reid-Hillview Airport in San Jose and were in the air together to take pictures of Lesh’s new aircraft when it lost power

The National Transportation Safety Board and the Federal Aviation Administration will investigate the accident, a spokesman confirmed Pilot Owen Leipelt filmed as the engine on his friend’s new Beechcraft Bonanza light aircraft failed and the plane hit the water off Half Moon Bay. Leipelt alerted air traffic control to the incident as he kept circling above the crash scene on Tuesday. 




In the water below, pilot of the downed aircraft, David Lesh, 34, was also filming on his waterproof phone as he and his only passenger, who has not been identified, found themselves treading water for 40 minutes before being rescued. They were unharmed.

‘I was probably 3,400 feet, did everything I could. I couldn’t get the motor running and put it into the Pacific.

‘We skipped along the water for a few hundred feet and the impact was very minimal, it was not hard at all and we immediately opened the door and got out onto the wing. 

‘We took a quick inventory of what was in the plane. I grabbed my cell phone and the keys to the car. 

‘I knew we had about 20 or 30 seconds before it sunk.’ 

The National Transportation Safety Board and the Federal Aviation Administration will investigate the accident, a spokesman confirmed to the DailyMail.com. 

A spokesman for the FAA said: ‘The FAA and NTSB will investigate. The NTSB is the lead agency and it typically takes the NTSB a year or more to determine a probable cause of an accident.’ 

Lesh said he believes bad gasoline “caused the plane to malfunction.”

Surprise! The Rock is a married man — he finally worked up the courage to say “I do” to his longtime girlfriend, and it went down in his home state of Hawaii.

Dwayne Johnson and Lauren Hashian tied the knot Sunday after more than a decade of dating, and they both wore white — a beautiful full-length gown and veil for her … and a button-down with white pants for him to really rock the island vibes.

The Rock shared the big news Monday morning, writing on IG, “We do. August 18th, 2019. Hawaii. Pōmaikaʻi (blessed).” He also shared a pic of himself dipping Lauren into a romantic kiss with an ocean backdrop.

His acting partner, Kevin Hart, was one of the first to congratulate him on wifing up Lauren.

The couple’s been together since 2007, and they have 2 daughters together — 3-year-old Jasmine and 1-year-old Tiana. Johnson also has an 18-year-old daughter from a previous marriage.

As for the timing of the wedding, it comes just weeks after The Rock announced he “quietly retired” from wrestling.

An amazing thermal video of Boeing 757 landing at Gatwick Airport has been taken by the UK National Police Air Service.

The thermal imaging video shows up all the “hot” spots in white and you can clearly see the engine exhaust and then on landing the wheels and brakes “light up.”

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