HAF F-4 AUP Phantom II night takeoffs (afterburner) and landings
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- Опубликовано: 11 окт 2024
- During flight operations in 117 Combat Wing in Andravida are filmed two night takeoffs and landings. The fighters are all F-4 AUP Phantom II from the 339 All Weather Squadron of the Hellenic Air Force.
I remember at DaNang air base, every 90 seconds one took off with afterburners; sounded like somebody was ripping the sky apart. Hard to sleep.
Our barracks were located just to one side of the approach path, about 400m before the runway. I used to sleep like a log. When I was at home on leave I woke up several times missing the noise of approaching jets.
I know the feeling I was stationed at Spangdahlem AB. F4s & F16s.
Memories indeed SP at Danang love to see the F4 loaded with bombs and go nose up full after burners after a rocket or mortar attack on the base.
My kind of ASMR
@@thekarmanline3748 Yeah same my friend
Navy F-4’s were always taking off from Cubi Point airbase in the P.I. In 1972. A group of us would get a case of beer and go to the beach near the end of the runway and watch in amazement as they hit the afterburners and disappeared!
My cousin used to fly the F-4, those afterburners are crazy!
They should be. Their job was to make a brick fly!
The best part about these kinds of videos is veterans telling their stories about these planes
This is a great input, indeed!
Holy cow that first phantom absolutely slammed down on the runway
Must be a Navy pilot
@@Heliosphan33 haha beat me to it was gonna say the same thing
Phantastic
Thank you!
@@SidewinderPlaneSpotting Phantastic; epic lol
Phenomenal, phantasmagorical just pherfect
When stationed at George AFB in the 70s, I would drive out by the runway surveillance unit at night to watch, feel, and smell the F-4 launches. 35,000 pounds of thrust, then kick-in the burners, lit the area up. The standing joke was that the F-4 (fondly known as the 'Lead Sled') was proof that you could make a brick fly with a big enough engine.
When I was in the USAF my home close to the end of the runway and when the F4 was taking off the wine glasses in the cabinet would dance off the edge of the shelf. Would watch them do night take offs. They would barely use 100 feet of runway and be straight up thousands of feet in seconds. Was awesome to watch them
. Still my favorite.
Beautiful bird change my mind
Look up the Wiki on Records.
One pilot said "Shows you can get a brick to fly with enough thrust"
Incredible footage. Love the f4
Thanks mate!
love this old beast From Italy! One of my fav planes of that era😍
I like how it looked like it was battling against gravity at first. J79's said WE'RE DOING THIS. Thats some power.
Big time fan of this bird. Have talked and stood with the Blue Angels when I was 11. Even watched one at night go off the end of the run way at 29 Palms. Was blessed to go to Miramar weekly too lots of go fasts
Got to see hundreds of these launch and recover, along with other birds, USN 68-74, NAS Miramar, 70-74, ETR-2, maintained GCA RADAR and TACAN. Part time job at station auto hobby shop
The legendary F4 E , upgraded in AUP F4 of the Hellenic Airforce , still flying since 1974.
The first landing ouch poor F-4
David Womacks maybe a newbie ?
@@gojo76 Probably a rookie as you said. The first guy taking off also performed an early rotation if you ask me. So it might actually be the same pilot but don't quote me on that. I didn't review both cases that closely since I was distracted and flattered at the same time by the sound of that old beauty.
Rookie landing
This is the only part I miss about my Military service
I grew up around Roosevelt roads naval station puerto rico during the 90s and the phantom 2s would rip open the skies they took off in clusters and would break the sound barrier regularly during exercises.
Those birds are heavy!!! Watching buddy ride a wheelie on takeoff for like 200yds was awsome!!! Those landing. Geez. The first night landing was hard 😂😂😂. The second fella set her down on the dead wheels. Rode it for 100 yds, then set the nose down softly. Wow. Those look like a handful to land and takeoff!! New pilots have it wayyyyy easier than these fellas did. Wayyyy easier.
Rear wheels
Hi, I'm a huge aerospace fan artist and I'm about to release a song called "Supersonic", a tribute to aviation. Is it possible to use this EPIC full afterburner footage for the musical video? Obviously giving the credits and gratitudes in the description. Greetings from Chile!
Phantoms for ever 😊
Yeah!
Kurnass for ever קורנסים לנצח
Bring back Spook.
Spectacular!!
Thank you!
This is so PHANTastic!
PHAbulous!
Love me sum night afterburners!!
338 squadron !!!!!!
Anytime,
Anywhere !!!!!!
This Is Fantastic Footage!! I Love The F4s!
Thank you! It is a unique fighter, indeed!
Was der Mensch doch so baut.👍
i doubt they'll ever make a plane as cool as the phantom again
Anyone else get a tingling sensation?
Definitely. Especially from the first take off when the burners light....
Asmr F4 phantom🤣
Cool!
When they took off with afterburners at Chu Lai, the sound would carry for miles.
Our base had some hills in the distance. The best acoustice were in the cold evening air, after wheels up, when our Kurnass gained some hight the sound of those magnificant J-79 turbojets would reverbarate off those hills for miles and miles into the clear darkening sky. No other jet sounds like a Phantom.
@@trespireAgreed. F-18s are just loud af, F-22s and F-35s are just boomy. I think the F-4 is both bc of it’s GE J-79s
Speaking of A/B's and Chu Lai, I was a night-check ADJ-2 with VF-121 at Miramar , which is just down the road from Chu la Vista. A frequent 'gripe' from pilots was that the burners didn't light off. My job was to crawl up into the arse-end and replace the igniters which were right behind the turbine section. And then to have the bird fueled and then to tow it down to the high-power turn-up area by 395. Screen the intakes, chock the wheels, chain it down including a massive chain at the hold-back on the keel. Check the pins in the ejection seat, climb in, and turn one or both engines up to idle and check for normal operation - RPM, hydraulic pressure, EGT, fuel flow, warning lights. If everything was groovey, I'd close the canopies and get down to the task at hand. First, bring an engine up to 100%, scan the gauges, and then ease the throttle into the first stage of a/b (of 4 stages) . If things went well, I'd like to ease back to 100% and then, 'balls to the wall !' Full a/b : a deafening noise, a trembling shudder, the nose of the bird scrunching down maybe half a foot. Scan the gauges, then back to 100%. And, since once is not really a thorough test, I'd give it another. And because I actually took pride in my work and would be signing my name on the work order, I'd give it another. And maybe one or two more because it was actually kinda hypnotic.
Wasn't too much later, the mayor of Chula Vista called the brass at Miramar and said, "Knock that shit OFF ! We got people trying to sleep over here." End of fun. End of story.
great video noct
Thanks
I miss the F-4's 😢😭
zooming right at the time of the begining of take-off prevents seeing the real acceleration of the plane ... unfortunately every take-off shooter do it.
Looks so heavy
The Phantom can carry 8.5 tons of external payload.
With upgraded avionics, the F-4E can deliver serious hurt.
Can’t believe my grandpa flew this death trap lol
We still fly all of them today but have been long taken out of combat by all of our nations including the USA because they are costly to maintain,operate,spare parts are a nightmare and some toher things too.
Phantom🖒😎💘
was that fuel leaking out of the vent on the first one ?
Well, asked and answered, it was fuel dump due to inertia. This is just what they told me, anyway.
News show New England somewhere
Wayne Brauch was the first pilot to take off and land in this video.
01:42 Looked a hard landing to me. Anyone else think so?
Probably used the BAK12 barrier engagement.
Not a problem for a Phantom.
F-15s and F-16s need a gentle touch. Phantoms can slam the runway all day long.
I have never seen one take off from the shore. Takes a long time to get into the air.
Our Kurnass used to launch with heavy payloads loads. I once counted 28 seconds till wheels up.
The F4 is the best f15 cool f22 raptor but the F4 is a gigantic steel vulture nothing like it
A tank with wings. Lol
Wish they woulda made an updated version of the F4, so sexy.
@@glennsparks919I wish they brought back the J-79 engine into service lol
@@SirensAndAlarmsOfNorthernIL Oh my God, its so hot.
Amazing old bird but man, what a fuel hog - 120,000 pounds per hour, which means that at full afterburner the F4 has 8 minutes flying time on a full load.
Is that with or without external fuel tanks? If that’s with the external fuel tanks then wow that’s insane
@@SirensAndAlarmsOfNorthernIL Internal fuel is 2000 gallons or about 13K pounds. That actually works out to about 7 minutes flying time at full afterburner if you do the math. Even the externals (about 8500 pounds) would only add about 4 minutes. Of course, no one is going to fly an F4 that long at
full AB so it's a bit of a moot point. Still, she ain't no Prius. LOL
Quién Llamó a la Fuerza Aérea Blitzwing
Andravida Airbase.....
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why they aren't use drag chute?
they do but it is barely visible at the night. Actually i used to be an airman in this specific airbase once, and remember waiting impatiently for the night take-offs! The sound of the J-79s with full afterburners is something to remember for the rest of my life...
They did both times. Hard to spot because of the lighting conditions.
Ese avion es tan grande como un f15