USAF T-38 Unrestricted Climb at MSP

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
  • Callsign: TALON52
    Route: MSP to ---
    Runway used for takeoff: 12R
    Aircraft type: Northrop T-38C Talon
    Registration #: 64-0265
    Location: Cargo Road(Aircraft Viewing Area)
    Camera: Panasonic HC-VX870
    Tripod: Me on a stepladder
    This video is property of Twin Cities Aviator and is not to be used in any way whatsoever without my written permission.

Комментарии • 510

  • @dennymontgomery9716
    @dennymontgomery9716 2 года назад +153

    Best flight of my flying career: back in 1965 at Willy, the chief scheduler walks in, looks around and sees only me sitting there reading a paper. All my syllabus rides were complete and I would get my wings later in the week. He says, “…get your gear, we have a T-38 we need to fly.” When I told him my syllabus rides were complete, he said “…I don’t care. Maintenance generated this airplane and it needs to fly for them to get credit”. He then told me “I don’t care what you do, just go fly that airplane”. I was then turned loose for a VFR flight into a MOA to do whatever I wanted in an almost new T-38. “Oh I have slipped the bonds of earth and danced the sky in laughter silvered wings..” …truer words were never written. Even after 57 years, 3000 AF flying hours, and an RF-4C combat tour, that flight still sticks in my mind…

    • @pigweed000
      @pigweed000 2 года назад +4

      The Tallon and Phantom, ahh yes, The two most gorgeous planes to grace the runways at Shaw AFB. That's a great story, Danny.

    • @user-pn3im5sm7k
      @user-pn3im5sm7k Год назад +1

      High flight poem!

    • @Mrhedgehog_69
      @Mrhedgehog_69 Год назад

      Wow…that’s a great memory to have! Have you considered buying and restoring one?

    • @nickbillings8668
      @nickbillings8668 Год назад

      That’s a great story. Thank you

    • @geofslagle410
      @geofslagle410 10 месяцев назад +2

      Put a smile on my face when I read that. My mind goes back to those precious memories of flying the t-38 also.

  • @flowjoe37
    @flowjoe37 2 года назад +416

    I’m a civilian maintainer and back in 2001 I was fortunate enough to take an incentive ride in a T-38. On take off we were cleared for unrestricted climb and it was freakin awesome!! Best ride of my life!!

    • @MrLongboarder87
      @MrLongboarder87 2 года назад +8

      @@kirkf4crewdawg604 every T-38 I’ve worked on has had two J85-GE-5 with afterburners.

    • @flowjoe37
      @flowjoe37 2 года назад +6

      Yes, all T-38’s at Laughlin had J85’s

    • @kirkf4crewdawg604
      @kirkf4crewdawg604 2 года назад +2

      @@MrLongboarder87 You guys are all correct. It's been over 35 years since I worked T-38s and F-5s. I don't know where I got J 57 from (maybe I was thinking of the "Tweet"). Thanks for the correction, Guys.

    • @jamesbroomfield8503
      @jamesbroomfield8503 2 года назад

      @@kirkf4crewdawg604 was

    • @kirkf4crewdawg604
      @kirkf4crewdawg604 2 года назад

      @@jamesbroomfield8503 What was?

  • @lucaas
    @lucaas Год назад +19

    Awesome catch mate! Would you be okay with me featuring this in an episode of Weekly Dose of Aviation? Of course you will be credited both in the video and in the description.

  • @daveriley6310
    @daveriley6310 2 года назад +104

    Remembering it like it was yesterday. But it's been over 50 years since I earned my USAF wings in that beautiful machine. Even today, the graceful lines of that tiny bird are a thing of incomparable beauty.

    • @GM-he3um
      @GM-he3um 2 года назад +1

      The wings are tiny! 😳

    • @freddarau
      @freddarau 2 года назад

      @@GM-he3um made off of the f-5 airframe. So they are going to be small

    • @mattg1847
      @mattg1847 2 года назад

      @@GM-he3um don’t need much wing when ya got a dang rocket pushin ya from behind ;) the wings are there just for stability and control at this point lmao
      (Obviously I am being facetious, you need some form of lift, but not much in this case)

    • @mattg1847
      @mattg1847 2 года назад

      CAVU, good sir. Thank you for your service.

    • @apedreus
      @apedreus 2 года назад

      Beautiful planes, very elegant. I was stationed at NAS Cubi Pt in the 80s, and the Philippine air force had a bunch of F5s (the non-training variant of the T-38) they used to do low approaches at Cubi, and were apparently unaware of the speed restrictions, if you get my drift. Fun to watch, but I was always kind of alarmed to see them flying so fast when there was all kinds of air traffic around, including helicopters and fruit bats with 6' wingspan.

  • @douglasroth9676
    @douglasroth9676 2 года назад +15

    I have 1700 hours in the T-38…and this was a beautiful reminder. Thanks.

  • @MrTmac1945
    @MrTmac1945 2 года назад +93

    When I went through USAF UPT in 67-68, we did this on our dollar ride in the T-38. It made you determined that you would somehow complete the program, and earn your wings.
    I always felt that every taxpayer should get a dollar ride in the T-38. All these years later, and the T-38 is still performing.

    • @Wtsmyageagain
      @Wtsmyageagain 2 года назад +3

      Very nice. I was an approach controller at Vance (not sure where you did UPT), and 38’s always made sequencing for arrival a bit tricky!

    • @MrTmac1945
      @MrTmac1945 2 года назад +2

      @@Wtsmyageagain Laredo.

    • @davidinflorida6814
      @davidinflorida6814 2 года назад +5

      @@Wtsmyageagain my brother did his UPT at Vance in 68-69. :-)

    • @thanojon1
      @thanojon1 2 года назад +2

      What did you track after 38s?

    • @cblanton42
      @cblanton42 2 года назад +3

      @@davidinflorida6814 I was there 20 years later, class of 88-04. Loved my time in the T-38!

  • @jonathanfisher3845
    @jonathanfisher3845 3 года назад +59

    Those B-2 guys/girls love to climb. That's the steepest pullup I've seen from a T-38 on takeoff.

    • @d3ltabrav0
      @d3ltabrav0 2 года назад +5

      I never saw them do this at SZL, only unrestricted climb I saw was when a F-18 would come through. We would coordinate with 42 then pile outside to watch it 😄

    • @90whatever
      @90whatever 2 года назад +14

      I flew them in UPT at Vance AFB...fun plane with crazy roll rate but you can see here even in full mil it takes a while to build up enough smash to yank it up to a near vertical climb.

    • @lordvader3538
      @lordvader3538 2 года назад +2

      @@90whatever as someone who will probably never fly a jet, what are some of the different characteristics of common planes?

    • @davidb6576
      @davidb6576 2 года назад +1

      @@lordvader3538 Well, yeah - you're too busy flying the TIE Advanced...

  • @borismedved835
    @borismedved835 2 года назад +32

    Reminded me of watching F-104s when I worked at Boeing for part of a summer in 1958. I was about 200 yards from the Larson AFB alert hangar. Two F-104s would come out of the hangar, pause for a few seconds while the ground crew did whatever they were doing, and them line up with the runway already hauling ass. The only thing better than this was the hundred-foot long streak of fire with shock rings in it when they lit the afterburner. I am sure I heard one pair blow past the sound barrier a few seconds after lifting off. One pair of those suckers passed over Fairchild or Geiger Field (Spokane) at 40 thousand feet seven minutes after starting the takeoff roll. That was a hot news item in Moses Lake. Love the sound of those planes.

  • @damaliamarsi2006
    @damaliamarsi2006 2 года назад +10

    No Music ++++ No mislabeling as "vertical takeoff" ++++ Loud engines ++++. No three hours of taxing and preparation ++++. This video shows a T-38 trainer and should itself be a training video on how to make excellent takeoff videos. Bang on!

  • @Propnut48
    @Propnut48 2 года назад +45

    One of the best flying and best looking jets made. It looks fast sitting still. ❤️

  • @polycarphunter2257
    @polycarphunter2257 2 года назад +18

    i was a crew chief on T-38s back in 1969. i'm amazed they're still in service. the other planes i crewed were the F-100Ds and F-4Ds, long gone.

    • @apedreus
      @apedreus 2 года назад

      All very cool airplanes. The T-38 is just a good design. Must be a blast to fly. Rocket engine and tiny wings.

  • @Mrbumbons1
    @Mrbumbons1 2 года назад +26

    The little jet that could. Worked them mid 80’s. Great plane.

    • @kirkf4crewdawg604
      @kirkf4crewdawg604 2 года назад +1

      Yeah, I worked them at Columbus AFB, 1985-88.

    • @gpdude22
      @gpdude22 2 года назад

      The little jet that still does.

  • @Kestrylll
    @Kestrylll 2 года назад +69

    Beautiful. She looks so svelte and quick next to all those commercial birds.
    The Tomcat is a beautiful marvel of engineering, the Eagle is amazing but the Talon, Freedom Fighter and Tigershark just look like what a fighter should be.
    The Viper is a close second to that image, it looks like the aftermath of the Eagle and the Tigershark spending a weekend at the coast with some wine and Barry White.

    • @kenmohler4081
      @kenmohler4081 2 года назад

      I couldn’t agree more. Something about the shape of the vertical stabilizer just works for me.

    • @SgtJoeSmith
      @SgtJoeSmith 2 года назад +3

      actually tiger 2 not tigershark. f5 a and b were freedom fighters and f5 e and f were tiger 2's. Or cf5a/b for canadair canadian air force versions. the f20 tigershark model that never went to production was based on the design but greatly updated. the t38 talons are in essence tiger 2 models.

    • @sparrowlt
      @sparrowlt 2 года назад +3

      @@SgtJoeSmith no they are not .. the T38 is sub-Freedom fighter actually... they have the less powerfull engines in the entire family and simpler wings with no leading edge extensions and not slats.. and if its a T-38A it has a fully analog cockpit (T-38Cs have the glass cockpit with HUD) very similar to the F-5A/B

    • @SgtJoeSmith
      @SgtJoeSmith 2 года назад +1

      @@sparrowlt thanks for updated info. 91bravo in guard years ago.. didnt get to play with jets. just what i know from model kits and books and tv growing up. just knew tigershark was non production modern day spin off.

    • @delten-eleven1910
      @delten-eleven1910 2 года назад +1

      The T-38 looks like an undersized chicken hawk amongst a bunch of roosting hens.

  • @integr8er66
    @integr8er66 2 года назад +31

    I live right under where the Mo National Guard F-15s did these kind of climbs along with the Boeing test pilots from Lamber Saint Louis AP where every one of them is made (F-15s) The sound shakes the ground and all you can see is a little pin head in the sky. The power is absolutely insane.

    • @kenmohler4081
      @kenmohler4081 2 года назад

      I saw those too. They were called “Viking Departures.” I’m pretty sure it was McDonnell Douglas, and many of those take-offs were to impress potential buyers. And the WERE impressive!

    • @integr8er66
      @integr8er66 2 года назад

      @@kenmohler4081 Yes it began as McDonnell Douglas, but it is Boeing now, and has been for prob 20 years or more, they still do it once in a while, and they are definitely still making them. My son works there and get to see them in all states of construction. He also has a friend who is an engineer and work in the Phantom Works group. I think he knows stuff we never will. 😁

    • @kenmohler4081
      @kenmohler4081 2 года назад

      I’m pretty out-of-date on St. Louis. I lived there 40 years ago. I am amazed they are still making F-15s. They are beautiful aircraft.

    • @yrunaked4
      @yrunaked4 2 года назад

      F15 thrust to weight ratio is close to a ICBM lol. I loved watching them at Lambert too. the landings were just as cool too.

    • @drive9997
      @drive9997 2 года назад

      That’s awesome

  • @Rama41
    @Rama41 2 года назад +66

    I liked flying T38s cross country in the 1970s. I remember cruise climbing to flight level 410 in 11 minutes. The typical length of the sortie, as I remember, was less than an hour and a 1/2, but you could fly around 700 miles in that time.

    • @vatandas1542
      @vatandas1542 2 года назад

      Question: did she use ground effect for speed?

    • @FFE-js2zp
      @FFE-js2zp 2 года назад +5

      You remember right, A long xc leg was a 1.5 stretching to a little over 700 miles. The 1960s era Wild West (I was busy being born) would stretch to 800+ by shutting down an engine. The best thing about T-38 xc was the transonic cruise speeds. In the high 20Ks 0.97 Mach cruise is not only achievable, but practical. You needed to call for your ride home, at your destination, while you were stepping to preflight the jet.

    • @rconawa
      @rconawa 7 месяцев назад +1

      I stretched one flight for a total 2.4 hours - very low on fuel at landing.

  • @W1BIU
    @W1BIU 2 года назад +37

    Was stationed at Beale AFB in 67-68. We would watch the SR71 with a T38 in chase takeoff and climb. The T38 would eventually fall off the climb as the SR71 would continue to max altitude.

    • @REALfish1552
      @REALfish1552 2 года назад +3

      I got to see an SR-71 take off one time while in Korea. No idea what it was doing at the Army airfield when the Air Base was just north of there by a minute or two of it's flight time (mechanical issue I'm guessing), but I heard a noise that definitely wasn't the normal rotary wing aircraft we had, looked over and saw this aircraft shoot damn near straight up. The person beside me was Air Force said it was a SR-71. This was sometime around 1997? It was something I'll never forget.

    • @ProBioMech
      @ProBioMech 2 года назад

      Beale in the 90s and was doing the same! Civilians did most of the work on them so I hardly had to touch them but they were beautiful

    • @ProBioMech
      @ProBioMech 2 года назад +1

      @@REALfish1552 I got to spend 2 years working on the SR and I still mark it as one of the greatest privileges of my life. Love that aircraft.

    • @measl
      @measl 2 года назад

      @@REALfish1552 *Just think, in '97 (and probably today as well), the SR-71 was doing things no other aircraft could even contemplate, and it was designed in the 1950s!. If they designed it today it would never get built - too many risks. The SR-71 exemplifies everything great about what **_used_** t be called "American Ingenuity".*

  • @davesnothere.5528
    @davesnothere.5528 2 года назад +6

    Where never lark, or ever eagle flew -
    And, while with silent, lifting mind I’ve trod
    The high untrespassed sanctity of space,
    Put out my hand, and touched the face of God.

    • @retiredpd
      @retiredpd 2 года назад

      Every morning they played that video (or evening?) before TV was 24/7

    • @davesnothere.5528
      @davesnothere.5528 2 года назад

      @@retiredpd I remember seeing it at night, when the channel was shutting down for the night p.s. my Pappy was a F-86 Driver

  • @MrGoodnplenty1957
    @MrGoodnplenty1957 2 года назад +1

    WM. Whiteman AFB, MO. The Companion Trainer Program (CTP) allows Jr B-2A pilots to get proficiency training. Back when I was in, it was called the Acceleration Copilot Enrichment (ACE) for the copilots and junior pilots to log more hours, proficiency, and basically go anywhere they wanted to go (smile).

  • @scottnicol1799
    @scottnicol1799 5 месяцев назад +1

    First flight 1959. A 65 year old design. I think of the way contemporary cars looked back then. The designers drove into work in these clunky machines and produced (with slide rules no less) this piece of art that looks like it could have been minted in 2024 - simply fantastic.

  • @coasternut3091
    @coasternut3091 2 года назад +13

    One of the coolest/most interesting unrestricted climbs I've ever been a part of was a CRJ 700. It's always interesting to see what those big planes can actually do once you don't have to worry about what the passengers think

    • @miloswanson9646
      @miloswanson9646 Год назад

      A neat airshow fly-by was also at Cleveland in the mid-'70s. United Airlines had just introduced the new 'rainbow' paint scheme and also were celebrating their new routes to Hawaii, as such, they had a 727-load of fresh pineapples flown in to the show, complete with grass-skirted employees. Just after Howie Keefe did his demonstration in his P-51D 'Miss America', the United crew did a demonstration using the 727! They made a high-speed pass down the runway, at maybe 60-75' altitude. The plane was already past the end of the runway when the sound hit the crowd. To see something THAT big, going THAT FAST just off the deck was incredible - and much faster than the P-51!!!!

  • @acward2007
    @acward2007 2 года назад +7

    Always thought these are a great looking aircraft. Didn't realise they had that good a climb rate but suppose as the Thunderbirds used them they must have been quite an impressive machine. Great filming 👍.

  • @Night56Owl
    @Night56Owl 2 года назад +16

    I LOVED flying that airplane. So much fun!

    • @joeymil219
      @joeymil219 2 года назад

      67th?

    • @Night56Owl
      @Night56Owl 2 года назад

      25th FTS VAFB 1979-80 UPT then 85-88 as IP/Flight Commander/Chief of Academic Training.

    • @jason401.
      @jason401. 2 года назад +1

      I just wanna fly something..

    • @rconawa
      @rconawa 7 месяцев назад

      Do you miss it as much as I do? I loved my time in the back of a T-38 and that was nearly 50 years ago.
      @@Night56Owl

  • @lamarl9978
    @lamarl9978 2 года назад +9

    One of the most beautiful airplanes made!

  • @nerblebun
    @nerblebun 2 года назад +4

    In 71 during USAF tech school at Sheppard AFB Texas, found out my 2nd cousin who I'd never met was the civilian Flight Line Superintendent for Fighter Jet Training Program. Great guy who scored me a ride in a T-38 Talon. A LT.Colonel Senior Training Instructor took me up. WOW!!!! .....is an understatement.

  • @joshtoll1039
    @joshtoll1039 3 года назад +3

    Wish I was there. I was there to watch the KLM land tho and I’m sure I saw u but Idk what u look like👍🏻

  • @robertlozano3156
    @robertlozano3156 2 года назад +17

    I was stationed at Ellington AFB from 66 to 69. The astronauts used fly out of there. One afternoon I was near the flight line and there were 3 or 4 of them doing touch and goes. It was like a race between them as they were roaring around in the pattern. It was beautiful watching them in their T-38s . They must have been having the time of there lives.

    • @billhale9740
      @billhale9740 2 года назад

      It's referred to as banging the stick I believe

    • @jedironin380
      @jedironin380 2 года назад

      My uncle, Dr. Joseph Allen might have been one of those astronauts! He flew the Talon many times and loved it. He went up on Space Shuttles twice.

    • @mpjopatv401
      @mpjopatv401 Год назад

      I hear them doing touch and goes at Ellington at my CAP meetings, always very cool

  • @johnpatrick1588
    @johnpatrick1588 2 года назад +6

    That is what makes flying fun. Straight and level is sleepy time.

  • @johnmajane3731
    @johnmajane3731 2 года назад +5

    Hard to believe it first flew in 1959

  • @TheSupergpop
    @TheSupergpop 2 года назад +7

    Used to go out to the perimeter road and watch Tweets and Talons taking off and landing when I was stationed at Columbus AFB, MS from 86-88. Fun planes to watch

    • @stevelong7638
      @stevelong7638 2 года назад

      Was also there from 84 to 88 loved it.

    • @rconawa
      @rconawa 7 месяцев назад

      75-05 and then back as a FAIP in the T-38 @@stevelong7638

  • @donb1183
    @donb1183 2 года назад +1

    If the T-38 was good enough for Neil Armstrong, Jim McDivitt, et al; it's good enough for me!

  • @miloswanson9646
    @miloswanson9646 2 года назад +29

    As a USAF Academy nominee waaaay back in the mid-'70s, I loved (and still do) the T-38! One of the prettiest Mach-capable jets - designed even before I was born! I'd give my left one (or maybe even both) to fly in one. As a side note, I attended an airshow at Lake Erie level (KBKL - Burke Lakefront Airport)in about 1974-5 in Cleveland OH, where a then-new F-15 performed a 'max-performance-takeoff', going from a standing start to straight up to 35,000' in less than 60 seconds, before tipping over to head to it's next destination. Back then I was taking flying lessons in a Cessna 150 that could do maybe 600fpm climb rate!

    • @utjay2008
      @utjay2008 2 года назад +1

      I’m a fellow nominee. I feel the exact same way 20 years later.

    • @headdownharris
      @headdownharris 2 года назад

      nice.

    • @yingnyang2889
      @yingnyang2889 2 года назад +1

      So you’re not a eunuch yet? 😂

    • @crash4687
      @crash4687 2 года назад

      It would have had to be 1975. I saw the first F-15 delivered to the Air Force in December of 1974 at Luke AFB, AZ with then new president Ford in attendance.

    • @miloswanson9646
      @miloswanson9646 2 года назад +1

      @@yingnyang2889 Nobody has offered me a flight in one! I've flown aerobatics in a AT-6/SNJ four times, so that's about as close as I have gotten.

  • @FFE-js2zp
    @FFE-js2zp 2 года назад +1

    It’s interesting that ACE jets never got the PMP mod since it was performed in 2003, primarily for safety.

  • @kylegilmore3810
    @kylegilmore3810 2 года назад +15

    Probably the most crisp and clear heatwave mirage I've seen on video, awesome plane

  • @Jkur2009
    @Jkur2009 2 года назад +5

    I work a few miles from Eglin AFB and this is a practically a daily thing here. They have a couple of black T-38’s that I think they must use to play “the bad guys”, they’ll usually tear out there first and then a few minutes later you’ll see the F35’s or F15’s taking off and passing overhead. I never get tired of watching them do that. The F35 sounds like a rocket flying overhead. Unbelievably loud.

  • @terrencejohnson85
    @terrencejohnson85 2 года назад +2

    I had the good fortune to fly this sleek aircraft and achieve 1.2 mach!

  • @hazmatt3250
    @hazmatt3250 Год назад +1

    Just got to see one out of Vance AFB at Northwest Arkansas National. I forgot how loud these things are! Lotta bang for such a small airframe.

  • @maxcorder2211
    @maxcorder2211 2 года назад +1

    Such a great airplane. Fly it with your feet on the floor. Ailerons are all you need. Moody AFB, 69-05.

  • @thefiringpin3489
    @thefiringpin3489 2 года назад +3

    Looks like how my Cessna 172 performs in -30

  • @3-2-1-.
    @3-2-1-. 2 года назад +12

    I've watched so many F-14s, 15s, 16s, 18s and 22s do this over the years. It is always an awesome experience! I wonder if the T-38's entire fuselage is a fuel tank? This plane is just straight up sexy! That being said, it was interesting to note how long it took to get enough airspeed to start that climb. The first planes I mentioned would have been going straight up in half the distance, or less.

    • @kirkf4crewdawg604
      @kirkf4crewdawg604 2 года назад +1

      @@Koji-888 No, just no afterburner on those J-57s.

    • @gpdude22
      @gpdude22 2 года назад +6

      @@kirkf4crewdawg604 Those are GE-J85-5s, and they are using the ABs.

    • @yingnyang2889
      @yingnyang2889 2 года назад

      Yeah, for a plane that’s over 50 yrs old why does that surprise you? Yes I know the math was around, but not able to be calculated manually. You have computers and flow dynamics that weren’t even thought of to help in the design. You forget, they used paper and pencil to draft the airplanes.

    • @sacredcreationz
      @sacredcreationz 2 года назад

      check out the viperjetmrkII then. the T-38 grown-up

    • @whitenoise509
      @whitenoise509 2 года назад +1

      @@yingnyang2889 The problem isn't aerodynamic, it's thrust to weight. There are plenty of 50 year old birds capable of a faster unrestricted climb than this one.

  • @user-xz9hu4rd2v
    @user-xz9hu4rd2v 2 года назад +16

    I did only one of those in my 3 years as T-38 instructor. The Air Force allowed them only for Functional Flight Checks but I was departing from Oceana and the Navy didn't care.

    • @pitts64lb
      @pitts64lb 2 года назад +1

      And there in a nutshell is the difference between the Navy and the Air Force.

    • @gpdude22
      @gpdude22 2 года назад

      Navy didn't use T-38s. They weren't carrier rated and they used F-5s for DAC.

    • @pitts64lb
      @pitts64lb 2 года назад

      I was referring to the difference in attitude between the services.

    • @davidleblanc8467
      @davidleblanc8467 2 года назад

      Did you request or did the controller offer the clearance?

    • @user-xz9hu4rd2v
      @user-xz9hu4rd2v 2 года назад

      @@davidleblanc8467 I truly can’t remember if I requested it or was outright granted by the tower. I know they had to coordinate with Departure control and was capped to 10,000.

  • @spinynorman887
    @spinynorman887 2 года назад +2

    TAKE NOTE RUclipsRS: THIS is how to do a military aviation video. No stupid music drowning out the Sound of Freedom! No constant interruptions for lame begging for ads, likes and subs, fat guys with huge cameras, or to show off still photos. And thank you for NOT including 20 minutes of the airplane sitting in the chocks while the crew does the Before Engine Start Checklist or taxiing at four miles per hour to the opposite end of the runway! Well done!

  • @THELIFEOFPRICE
    @THELIFEOFPRICE 2 года назад +3

    sooo sick!

  • @GeorgeJansen
    @GeorgeJansen 2 года назад +1

    First flight March 10, 1959❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @joeminella5315
    @joeminella5315 2 года назад +1

    Flew them in 1965!

  • @flippinnickelproductions298
    @flippinnickelproductions298 2 года назад +1

    I miss the T-38 Thunderbirds

  • @jaws8817
    @jaws8817 2 года назад +1

    T-38s? No one's been this close before!

  • @franciscob.deoliveira8904
    @franciscob.deoliveira8904 2 года назад +1

    Its what you do when you have the greatest job in the world.

  • @Glen.Danielsen
    @Glen.Danielsen 2 года назад +1

    Looks like he took off into ground effect, stayed there for gear-up and increase speed, then _UP!_

  • @tomgates316
    @tomgates316 2 года назад +3

    He’s just flying the old MSP noise restriction rules. Heavy climb out on takeoff. Steep late descent for landing. Keep as much distance between aircraft and ground as soon/late as possible.
    Fan jet engines relieved those old noise restrictions. 🤓

  • @lindsayplymale2253
    @lindsayplymale2253 2 года назад +4

    Worked in the control tower at Moody AFB in 1969-70. Test pilots would fly T-38’s that had to be certified after a problem had been corrected. Quite frequently they would ask clearance for a max climb to 45,000 ft. and then they would corkscrew it on the way up.

    • @normd6475
      @normd6475 2 года назад

      I was in class 70-04 at Moody, basically all of '69. You might have been in the tower the day my IP and I lost both engines just after liftoff in a 2-ship flight.

  • @oxxnarrdflame8865
    @oxxnarrdflame8865 2 года назад +1

    Sweet, still a rocket. I was able to do one unrestricted climb in pilot training.

  • @superyachtchef
    @superyachtchef 2 года назад +2

    26 seconds, watching a plane doing nothing 👎

    • @twincitiesaviator
      @twincitiesaviator  2 года назад

      If you look closer you can see the heat plume build up and heat their clearance from ATC. 🙂

    • @MichaelLeeRilee
      @MichaelLeeRilee 2 года назад +1

      That's aviation. Enjoy it while it's still around.

  • @christopheblanchi4777
    @christopheblanchi4777 2 года назад +2

    The T38 has to be one of the most elegant trainer in existence.

  • @flymeaway1216
    @flymeaway1216 2 года назад +2

    i remember a couple years ago i was touring a b17 and there was 4 of these t38s and i got to watch them start up and take off and they could be so quiet and the so loud, it was crazy to me and i watched them do 2 man formation takeoffs and it was so cool to me

  • @carlpboyer
    @carlpboyer 2 года назад +2

    I love flying the 38. Such a nimble bird.

  • @jeffroller9260
    @jeffroller9260 2 года назад +2

    Isn't that a Mig 28 from Top Gun? 😄

  • @fredtedstedman
    @fredtedstedman 2 года назад +1

    she sure doesn't get old does she !

  • @IMEMINE.
    @IMEMINE. 2 года назад +2

    Back in’93 I was working the ramp on the G sometime in late October at MSP. All of a sudden the field got whisper quiet. I looked to East and there she was all lit up and ready for launch. This was F-16 solo and it executed the same mini air show as the T-38 above. Whata great sky high moment.

  • @Man_of_TheWay
    @Man_of_TheWay 2 года назад +2

    Absolutely gorgeous piece of equipment. After being around these countless times, it never gets old looking at them. It's always possible that I could take one for a sortie one day.

  • @BrenQ99
    @BrenQ99 2 года назад +1

    Tax payer gas, being wasted for fun. So….. yay?

  • @matthewprather7386
    @matthewprather7386 2 года назад +2

    Flap retraction at 0:53 - significant settling? Or just releasing back pressure to get back into ground effect to increase acceleration?

  • @kingofcastlechaos
    @kingofcastlechaos 2 года назад +1

    I was a raft guide in the 80's and one of my customers was a T38 Instructor. We immediately bonded over the T38 since I grew up next to Ellington Field. (I actually dated the daughter of the coronel responsible for moving the shuttle via 747 between coasts- no idea why I mentioned that. since the therapist said not to ever.)
    Anyway, As part of my tip, he gave me his info for a ride and I FRIGGIN LOST IT!!!
    A year ago we moved "for the last time" again and I found it. What a huge deal that would have been. OMG I love that aircraft. Thanks for the video.

  • @oldphantomflyer
    @oldphantomflyer 2 года назад +3

    Remember those jets well from fighter lead-in training at Holloman AFB. Used to call them "pocket rockets". Great plane for low level down the canyons of the Colorado River.

    • @Deathmastertx
      @Deathmastertx 2 года назад +2

      They'll never match a T-38 but watch passenger and cargo aircraft when they're empty or relatively light. They have some seriously powerful engines.

  • @sjwilloughby-greene8214
    @sjwilloughby-greene8214 Год назад +1

    HOLY COW
    W😊W!!!!
    ❤❤❤

  • @d-mack7053
    @d-mack7053 2 года назад +3

    Pure vertical thrust at it's best.

  • @76manitou
    @76manitou Месяц назад

    Went thru pilot training with class 98-03 at Sheppard AFB. Unluckily I got kicked out during IFR training with T38s. I still think of that beast after 26years, almost everyday.

  • @Pilot545
    @Pilot545 2 года назад +1

    Haha. That little T-38 def needed the time to accelerate. Those little engines were working overtime on that climb. 👍🏼

  • @turboromy
    @turboromy 2 года назад +1

    At this given situation being at a civilian airport not closed for airshow, does the pilot get permission to go faster than 250 knots (or 200) when given permission for such a climb ? Or does it climb right at that speed limit ?

    • @mig29fulcrumflyer
      @mig29fulcrumflyer 2 года назад +1

      The military has an exemption to exceed 250 knots below 10k ft when faster speeds are spelled out in the aircraft's flight manual.

    • @pi-sx3mb
      @pi-sx3mb Год назад

      The standard speed for buzzing around the traffic pattern in the 38 is 300 kts.

  • @russjackson7042
    @russjackson7042 2 года назад +1

    saw gene cernan (last man on the moon) do this in nasa t-38. shaw afb sc 1980ish. had just given him wx brief, ops guy told me who he was, and was going to do max performance takeoff. never got more than 6ft entire length of runway then straight up to 35000. rip col.

  • @larrymangold1048
    @larrymangold1048 Год назад

    Today at Langley AFB, I watched five F-22's and five T-38's taking off. The F-22 was wicked loud compared to the T-38, but both were very cool to watch.

  • @Universal_exports87
    @Universal_exports87 3 месяца назад

    Hope to Heck we can privatly own one on Basic Med with the upgrades coming to the fleet. Longshot, but dream big right? Lol.

  • @Mightiflier
    @Mightiflier 2 года назад +3

    Such a gorgeous jet.

  • @Ilgenfixit80
    @Ilgenfixit80 2 года назад +1

    It looks like that one belongs to Whiteman, which has older T-38A models. It never gets old seeing an unrestricted climb!

  • @SteveSwags
    @SteveSwags 3 года назад +2

    Awesome!! I saw it taxiing, but was trying to escort several people around the airfield at the time and couldn't stop to watch. Wish I would have seen the climb!

  • @kevinburkhardt130
    @kevinburkhardt130 2 года назад +1

    I wonder if the pilot was reliving the days when the USAF Thunderbirds flew T-38s

  • @jshepard152
    @jshepard152 2 года назад

    I just finished reading The All-American Boys by Apollo astronaut Walt Cunningham. Walt describes the T-38 as a hot airplane, and said that flying them was a major perk of being a NASA astronaut.

  • @tanhelmet
    @tanhelmet 2 года назад

    I remember back in '98 ,I visited my old brother Outside of Bracketville Tx. apparently one of these training Aircraft crashed and the authorities closed down the road.

  • @tatocorvette
    @tatocorvette 2 года назад

    747-8 that's a NEGATIVE! You are not authorized to do that as well... Only cleared you for takeoff not show off! :)

  • @russvoigt1068
    @russvoigt1068 2 года назад

    Gen Chuck Yeager had a t38 at Edward's AFB for his personal use provided by Northrup

  • @FitnessConnect
    @FitnessConnect 2 года назад

    Question about military aircraft doing unrestricted climb out of non military airports. First of all, it’s always badass and I love watching them. My question: Are they granted clearance for it just for show, because they know everyone loves it? Or is there a real procedural reason and preferred by air traffic....like to get them clear of the airspace around the airport as fast as possible?

  • @BigChuck_1
    @BigChuck_1 2 года назад

    Now?!?
    No.
    How about Now?
    No, not yet.
    Now??
    Almost.
    Pull Back....................
    .......NOW!
    YEEEHAAAAAAAA!!!!!!

  • @gort8203
    @gort8203 7 месяцев назад

    Just saying, but cleared to climb and maintain 10,000 is hardly an unrestricted climb.

  • @jimratliff2753
    @jimratliff2753 10 месяцев назад

    Damn, that was cool. I see the T-38's fly ever day here in CA out of Beale AFB (BB) near my home. Bad ass jet.

  • @roadskare63
    @roadskare63 2 года назад

    one word comes to mind..........................................WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @patfranks785
    @patfranks785 2 года назад

    They, along with the F-5 Freedom fighter, were some sexy fighters. I just noticed that thing fly's in a serious nose up attitude.

  • @danielginther4879
    @danielginther4879 2 года назад

    Coolest unrestricted climb was a German f-104 take off at McCord afb in 1982

  • @PenDragonsPig
    @PenDragonsPig 2 года назад

    Oh wow. Up to a point, my pick-up is kinda fast. Why do they say the Freedom Fighter is sorta crap- I’ve noticed no one seems to hang much off em.

  • @moacyrjetpilot
    @moacyrjetpilot 2 года назад

    …shouldn’t be necessary to have wings if flying was inteded.… 🤔😁😁

  • @coryhobbs5386
    @coryhobbs5386 2 года назад

    I lived in Fairbanks fighter jets were common with the Air Force base nearby.. F - 35 I think

  • @shevetlevi2821
    @shevetlevi2821 2 года назад

    So sleek. I think that the T-38 and even more so its more tactical brother the F-5 are the best looking planes ever. Like a stilleto. Surprising that the F-20 never made it.

  • @joshboevers7982
    @joshboevers7982 2 года назад

    Bruh I think adding 2 hashtags boosted your views immensely

  • @jgrokoest2419
    @jgrokoest2419 2 года назад

    Is this what they flew straight up during Test Pilots School class.? Also I believe the astronauts used it to get around but it had golf clubs pod underneath . I think it was painted blue/white. Was a long time ago I got a tour. Great plane!

  • @BeechSportBill
    @BeechSportBill 2 года назад

    Major Dick Shortridge had 6500 hrs instructing in T-38s

  • @tanwera
    @tanwera 2 года назад

    How can this type of flying allowed at a commercial airport? Seeing that taxiing commercial airline really surprised me.

  • @มดแดง-ฃ3ข
    @มดแดง-ฃ3ข Год назад

    โทร ออกแบบได้ดีมากมันมีเพียงห้องโดยสารเท่านั้นที่เป็นส่วนที่สังเกตได้ง่าย

  • @mikeiaquinta245
    @mikeiaquinta245 2 года назад

    Welded engine cracks on T 38 in the summer of 66
    Watched night take offs with after burners

  • @flyingfortressrc1794
    @flyingfortressrc1794 2 года назад

    I'm glad that I was able to see the Thunderbirds back when they were flying T-38's

  • @BoringFlightVids
    @BoringFlightVids 2 года назад +1

    Those wings arent even making lift like that...its all engine....

    • @peterarthur2530
      @peterarthur2530 2 года назад +1

      True. T-38s have zero camber (symmetric) solid honeycomb wings (no fuel tanks). Lift is not generated until rotation speed when the pilot pulls the stick slightly aft, resulting in a positive angle of attack, thus developing lift. The lightweight, thin, honeycomb design gives the wing considerable strength while the reduced surface area results in a low coefficient of drag. I flew it back in the 70s.

    • @RusselArthur
      @RusselArthur 2 года назад

      @@peterarthur2530 so that is why the nose is up before the climb. The wings are not true airfoils. I guess the trick is to go fast as hell, but you can never really fly the plane in a straight line.

  • @georgewright1093
    @georgewright1093 2 года назад

    Believe it or not, I was flying that. And I have never even taken a flying lesson. I was strolling across the runway one day and I saw it sitting there and the keys were in it so I thought, how hard can it be to fly one of these? Turns out it's not that hard.

  • @wernerc.432
    @wernerc.432 2 года назад

    F! Yeah, that's my Air Force!! God Bless America!!