Curiously, a few people seem to object to the nickname, "Aluminium Death Tube" for the Lightning, despite it being quite common amongst ground crew in the late 60s and early 70s. The IWM website also refers to it by that name - www.iwm.org.uk/history/the-english-electric-lightning-which-was-accidentally-flown Personally, I consider it to be an amusing name for a fantastic aircraft.
Hi Matt, this is not connected to the Lightning, but unsure of how else to contact you (apologies!). I’m a retired RAF pilot and well remember Tony Dobbie at RAF Valley in 1983. I’ve just taken delivery of his book, “Suki, Me & World War III”. If you have any contact details for him, would you be willing to forward him my email address? In order to give you my address, do you have a secondary email address that I could contact you on? Thank you!
@@awatchman9000I meant to add, Dobz is always keen to catch up with folks from his RAF days. Let me know if you don't have any luck with the email address.
Argentine Air Force pilot here. During my year-long UN tour in Cyprus I visited RAF Akrotiry Air Base to attend the 2001 open day and see the Red Arrows air display. Upon entering the base I saw for the first time in my life a Lightning that was displayed there as a gate guard. It was a great experience for me. Cheers!
I lived in Cyprus 1979-1980, as my dad was in the army. Incredible memories of rows of Lightnings at Akrotiri . The air filled with literally thunder and Lightnings.
@@rocketfueller When I was in Cyprus , Akrotiri was an overseas RAF base used for air deployment. During my stay there I was assigned to UNFICYP within the UN Protected Area (Nicosia) . My accommodation was opposite the officers' mess. Where did you live in Cyprus?
An ex RAF navigator told me the basis of all fast jet navigating was remembering; "you were only finding out where you used to be, and where you were going. It was never about where you actually were". I suspect those words were never more apt than when travelling at Mach 2.
As a pilot at 17 flying 100 MPH I got lost all the time. "You've never been lost until you're lost at Mach" two was the best line of your humble Lightning Pilot. Bravo!
As a child at the Biggin Hill air show in the sixties , Lightening beat up the field . VERY low . The ground shook . It was deafening ! One of the best days of my life .😁
My dad flew the Lightning with 19 Sqn (92's sister Sqn) at Gütersloh in the late 60s. He loved it and enjoyed all the nicknames it had. He usually called it 'the Frightening' and often repeated the old line about it only having wings to keep the nav lights apart.
My old Pop was flying Hunters at Gutersloh in 1966 and I well recall the first Lightnings arriving there soon after. The Boy Scout hut was on the edge of the peri-track and we would see them come past with their hoods up after landing. The pilots would all wave to us as we stopped to watch them cruise past. All the planes were silver polished alloy then and very posh compared to all the other camouflaged RAF aircraft. I recall impressive displays of mass take offs and vertical climbs until you couldn't see the aircraft any more (and I had perfect eyesight then). I recall also visiting one of their hangers with Father and being allowed to sit in one. I also recall that two were always on standby at the end of the runway with their pilots sitting ready to go. I think we were lucky to be there and experience these events. Amazing times and amazing people.
@@thedustofages That's lovely to read. Thank you. The two jets ready to go were called the Battle Flight (later known as Quick Reaction Alert, I think) My old man talked about how miserable it was, sitting in a shed during a West German winter.
@@Maxley..Yes just thinking of it now brings back the wonderful smell of jet fuel, the heat of the engines, air shimmering and the ear splitting roar and vibrations of take off. They were very loud aircraft weren't they and in fact, before they arrived, I heard one of the wives on our Hunter Squadron talking to Mother. A Hunter came over fast at low level and made everyone jump and the lady said "it will be worse when the Lightnings arrive". Pop also did the Lightning course, but never joined a Sqn. I have a great photo of him standing with a group of fellow students in front of one. A number of them are sporting medals from WW2 and it brings home the realisation of just how far Britain's aeronautical achievements had come in that short time. Great to hear of your experiences and who knows? we may have met.
I spent 3 years doing major overhaul engine work on F3 & T5 Lightning’s at RAF Leconfield 60 MU before being posted to 56 sqdn RAF Akrotiri. At Leconfield the test pilot, Squadron Leader Dick Bell MBE took me up in XV328, a T5 for the ride of a lifetime. He allowed me to do most of the flight, making me a member of the ten ton club. I never heard them called a death tube, a frightning, yes.
We lived in West Germany in the 1960s and RAF Gutersloh was our nearest RAF base. It was our base for family air trooping. I went through there many times and it was always a thrill to see a Lightning.
I was stationed at RAF Gütersloh 1970-1972 and worked in an office in a hangar at the end of the runway. There was a time when all Lightnings were serviceable and all of them (I think 36) were ordered up. What a sight! Shooting nearly straight up with both after burners glowing. Fantastic.
Coolest thing i ever saw was at age 14 on a boat off the coast of Northumberland. 2 lightnings low level over the sea, so low the spray was higher than they were. Epic
Working in BAe Saudi in '86, the lightnings went home to be replaced by Tornados - as they left they came across lower and lower, the last on dodging the lampposts on the airfield and getting the viewing ground crew on airport steps to duck. Fab aircraft.
In 1997 I had the pleasure of meeting two RAF pilots on a training course at Warton who had flown the Lightning. They said it was a brilliant aircraft. Flying it was like being strapped to a rocket. It scared the pants off them and they absolutely loved it.
As a young boy in the ATC camped not far from the runway at RAF Wattisham during the height of the Cold War. Watched the Lightnings of 111 Squadron scramble in the middle of the night. Just epic!!!
My great friend, drinking partner and band-mate, the late Wing Co. Gus Crockett, RIP, was a Lightning pilot for many many years. Used to love hearing of his flying adventures. Very much missed indeed.
There was that one time where a ground engineer was taxiing a Lightning down the runway with its canopy open following maintenance in order to do a systems check. The engineer accidentally knocked the throttle into the TOGA detent, lighting both afterburners and hurling the plane down the runway. By the time the unhappy engineer had recovered from being thrown backward into the seat there was not enough runway to stop the plane, so he took off and made a couple of terrifying orbits around the field before making a safe landing. During the takeoff roll, he narrowly missed a loaded fuel bowser that was crossing the runway, a Beverley transport plane at the end of the runway, and a junior school just beyond the runway end. Those were the days.
Apparently, he had flown light aircraft and was familiar enough with the controls to bring her back down..? Still, quite an upgrade from a single propeller to twin reheat with a deactivated ejection seat and no canopy 😄
Taffy Holden! I think that in addition to no canopy, helmet or comes, he elected to land with a tailwind (the wrong way) as there was the school. at the end of the "in to wind" approach, which meant a (likely) overshoot would have been disastrous. Bless him
He was an Engineering Officer and he opened the throttles too far during an engine ground run (which he had no training to do) and the aircraft jumped the chocks. Yet another reason why groundcrew kept 'Engineering' Officers as far away from the aircraft as they could.
I saw him being interviewed. He seemed pretty traumatised - which is understandable. But what an incredible thing to do. Takeoff may have been largely involuntary, but to even get it to rotate and off the ground is amazing enough, let along bringing it back and landing it. The stuff of legends.
My favourite aircraft ever with the possible exceptions of the Sopwith Camel and the Spitfire. I remember going with the school RAF section to summer camp at Binbrook in the late 60s. Wonderful.
I had the Airfix model with the lighting bolt decals 55yrs ago, and can remember seeing them { in the 60s it could only have been a lighting } flying so high but all you could see was the con trail moving so fast
They look amazing now so I imagine they must have looked incredible in the 60s and 70s. I was into Airfix once upon a time. I'm half tempted to pick a kit up and try again 🤔
The Squadron with the Black & Gold lightning bolts either side of the roundel was 111 Squadron. They were based at RAF Wattisham in the early 70's along with 29 Squadron. 29 Squadron's badge was XXX in bright red letters (30 in Roman numerals). According to squadron history the squadron was formed in the days of biplanes made from wood, fabric and dope. A Painter and Doper was told to paint 29 in roman numerals on all the aircraft as a squadron identifier. He asked, "what's 29 in roman numerals" and was told X, X, I, X, so that's what he painted on the aircraft, an X, another X and one more X. I was based at Wattisham from Oct '71 until April '73 before going to 56 Squadron at Akrotiri in Cyprus, a wonderful time and a great aircraft.
The "death tube" moniker was (supposedly) more to do with the what the Lightning represented. From what I've heard, it was a nickname given to it before any of them crashed anyway.
Always thought the Lightning was called the "Frightening" by its pilots, not "Aluminum Death Tube". But his description of the work load, really validates why the F-4 Phantom was designed to be operated by a two-man crew, pilot and a radar intercept officer. It would be very difficult for a single-pilot to maintain situational awareness in combat with that high work load. The RAF in the '70s would have been a fascinating place, with Lightnings, Phantoms, Harriers in service, and the Tornado being developed. Also, none of those supersonic jets are really recoverable from a spin, because they are "fuselage loaded" (long fuselage- to wing span ratio), and develop into a flat spin. That wasn't really a characteristic unique to the lightning.
It appears that the Lightning had quite a few nicknames. I'm working on a short video together that explores the subject. As for flying and navigating at high-speed, I struggle to keep my car straight and level down the M6, so hats off to anyone who's flown a fast jet 😉
I recall from my RAF days in the 1970's an RAF Hunter pilot transitioning to the Lightning. After his first solo he told his instructor that he had everything under control until he made his first mistake. He released the parking brake .
I joined the RAF in 1979 and I loved the lightning but never saw one. I did see Phantoms at RAF kinloss next to the Nimrods both elegant aeroplanes but those random Phantoms really looked the part.
I saw the Lightning flying at the West Wycombe airfield airshow in the 70s. There was a very long delay in flying at the end of the afternoon, and I wondered if an announcement would soon come the airshow had finished. What I didn't know, was the long delay was due to an RAF Lightning. Looking from right to left, I spotted a low level aircraft approaching in the distance. It was a Lightning! When it reached runway centre point, on one afterburner, it went straight up into a vertical climb at a great rate of knots. Quite literally the ground shook where I was standing with the roar, as it rocketed straight up into a steep vertical climb, and through the low level cloud base. Simply amazing the RAF Lightning !
At Humberside 92 he finished his display in the same way, vertical into a clear blue sky until he vanished, then a small twinkle of sunlight as he rolled out at 60/65,000 ish.
@@markstainton9080 After that the Lightning did a few high speed passes on reheat, and then shot off into the distance with my ears still ringing. The whole display was over in no more than 10 minutes, with a very dull early evening and low level cloud base. In and out and gone in a flash! 👍⚡
I have just recently flown the Lightning simulator (at Tangmere) I was surprised at how stable it was. I had expected a twitchy helter skelter ride , but no , It was strait forward . Even the landing seemed reasonable even though it was at 160. But its a monster of an aircraft ! So big.
I knew a young man who worked on these'death tubes' and he related a comment by an American pilot given permission to fly one. WOW!! The biggest kick up the rear I have ever had. Translate into American terminology with emphasis.
@@AirForceAnecdotesThe Starfighter hadn't worked out, you see... best look up the 'Lockheed Starfighter bribery scandal' to discover how the US aircraft industry reacts when it might lose money. ;-)
I was at Gutersloh 67 to 69. A radar engineer we sat on the side of the runway all day with the radar. The QRA lightning took off fairly regularly to scare back Russian aircraft from the Polish border. One day I saw one fitted with a belly tank return with no landing gear. The tank ripped away as it touched the runway (of course), it was empty but the residual fuel lit up the runway from one end to the other. Pilot recovered no problem. The runway had an arrester net for brake failures. One day a german F104 (Widow maker) called mayday because of a fire warning. He was vectored to the runway in use and the net raised at the other end. However the Pilot saw the runway and just wanted to get down so made a steep approach on the wrong runway. The Net was hard to see from the back and he ran into it crashing a few yards down the runway. The pilot got out spitting nails to fins out "who put the F*%$ing net up". He calmed down when it was pointed out he had landed in the wrong direction.
My old man ex Lancaster crew was Intelligence officer at Geilenkirchen in the 60s when 92 were based there and had trip in the T4 two seater with the then Wing Commander Jo Gilbert. Became a member of the 1000 miles an hour club. Wonderful aircraft. Happy days.
The best 'asset' of the Lightning was seeing one taking off; accelerated down the runway, suddenly tipped up at about 80 degrees and woosh was gone - ! 😊
Confusing the Lightning with the F104 Starfighter I think. In all the time I was serving in Germany I never saw a Lightning and they were tasked as interceptors anyway.
@@bfc3057Yes there were, but in the air defence role. Of course at some point an aircraft or two could have taken part in a ground attack exercise but it would have been very rare. And they didn’t fall out of the sky like German F-104s
@@bfc3057 Acknowledged, just saying that Lightnings were highly unlikely to have been involved in ground attack as their role was interception of unidentified planes crossing into the Air Defence Intercept Zone on the Inner German Border. My understanding is that only two Lightnings were lost in their twelve years of service with RAFG.
My late Father did his national service as an airframe mechanic on the Canberra PR7s at Laarbruch in Germany he told me all sorts of stories of things that happened to aircraft.
Yeah, I think only the most serious incidents make it to the news and general public awareness - the rest, including all the near misses,is just 'part of the job...'
At about 1966/67 I was a motor mechanic in Dusseldorf - one of our customers was a Lightning pilot at Gutersloh, I returned his Hillman Imp of all things🤫 to the base one day and was told he was on patrol with his wingman along the East German border by Hannover and was directed to wait beside a hanger with the ground crew - within minutes they came over the runway as low as you like waggling wings and then a vertical climb - showboating ? Yes Thrilling ? You bet your bottom dollar ! Very much our last Hurrah !!
I have only flown the EE Lightning in VR but even so it was terrifying at first, that and the Phantom F4 are the only 2 in VR that had me worried. Not counting the worst ever ME109. (for different reasons)
Some used to say the E.E. Lightning was as Aerodynamic as a BRICK and shouldn't really fly. But it was so fast along the runway that the only thing it could do to save the flight crews lives WAS to Fly and Oh my "Giddy Aunt" it was awesome. better than S E X!
I was an armourer on 19 (F) Squadron, RAFG from 1971 to 74, and we used to tell the pilots that they had 5 weapons on board. You could see them puzzling; two guns, 2 Firestreak missiles…? What else? We said you have an aircraft faster than anything in the sky, it’s your weapon of last resort because the Bears mustn’t get through!
Yeah, I've heard a similar explanation from an ex Lightning pilot. To some, the plane was a third missile if it came to it. Before my time, but I can imagine the threat of WW3 kicking off any minute was rather unsettling.
That's was great, thanks. I know some of the newer fighter / bombers have amazing performance, but they just don't compare to aircraft like the Lightning and F111. I knew an Aussie guy who wanted to fly the Lightning so badly he moved to England (long time ago). I hope he achieved his dream.
I always wanted to fly an F-15 but unfortunately the USAAF won't let you unless you're a qualified pilot and even then you could only fly it where they told you too. Pretty dull really.
That's really sad to hear. It just reinforces how dangerous it is to fly fast jets. Even with all the training and safety procedures in place today, flying at high speed tests the best to the limit.
I spent quite a while each day photographing 'scrubbed' or 'flat-spotted' Jaguar aircraft tyres. Heard that at the time, only Concorde and the Lighting used more tyres. The Jag got better with mods, but...
We had a kite at Wattisham that leaked like a sieve (more than usual) but we could never trace the source. In the end they painted the aircraft in a special (Pink) revealer paint and put an additive in the fuel that would turn the paint blue if it came into contact with it. Wait for the blue streaks and follow them back to the source of the leak(s) - easy right! The damn thing flew for nearly a month without a trace of a leak! Eventually the pilots got so upset flying a pink lightning the paint was removed. Next flight the aircraft leaked like a sieve again!
From my time in the RAF including the same period the saying was a quote from the Americans and was thus rendered as "Aluminum death toob" ! Great aircraft though. I flew transports but did a stint at Bawdsey and Boulmer as a Fighter Controller so I did have some experience from a different perspective of the Lightnings especially the Mark 3 version which, due to its extremely small fuel load was referred to as an accident waiting to happen every time one got airborne.
I'm sure there was an American jet with a similar nickname (F-104?) I wonder if it was borrowed, although the Lightning preceded the Starfighter. I've read somewhere that they couldn't stay airborne for very long if the pilot really gave it some welly.
It was the first modern combat jet. Service men were not used to all the new technology. Today the Lightning would be looked upon as par for the course. Therefore I think the Lightning gets an unfair reputation as tricky to maintain and operate. It was not and led the way for combat aircraft that came subsequently. A sane country would have upgraded the radar he was talking about but this being the UK we did not develop another combat jet radar until the 1980s and the Fox Hunter radar which is why it took so long and had so many problems to get the Fox Hunter radar into service. Today we have perfected developing radars and maintained the momentum in doing so with the result we can relatively quickly and easily turn out new advanced radars. We have not taken a twenty year holiday and allowed all the expertise to retire and die off.
The Germans should have bought Lighnings instead of buying nearly a thousand (916) Lockheed F-104 Starfighters, of which 292 aircraft crashed and 116 pilots lost their lives.
The Lightning was what it was for well thought out reasons & was defined by its mission requirements. Short range? There wouldn't be much warning of Soviet bombers. Simple radar? Come WW3 intercepts would be almost certainly under ground radar coverage. Etc etc.
The expression 'all-aloominum death toob' was current in the RAF when I was in, up to the mid-1980s. It referred to the then-standard US and Soviet all-missile interceptors such as the F-104 and the Mig-21 or Sukhoi Su-7, -9 & -11 series, then being replaced with later or improved versions, or rejected altogether and corruptly sold as a ground-attacker, as in the F-104's case. The F-104G in German service definitely lived up to it's pilot-killing reputation, and in later years the enormous corruption and bribery scandal about it's acquisition by the German government broke, and then the guilty escaped scot-free.
I've been reading up on the origins of the name, and it does seem to have come kver from the US. Some Lightning pilots were of the view that the name applied as if/when WW3 began, there wouldn't be a home to go to and some concluded that their Lightnings would be used as a third and final missile to down Russian bombers. Rumour has it, the "aluminium death tube" moniker was common before any of them were involved in fatal accidents.
I once worked on an OCU (Operational Conversion Unit) where the examiner's comments on a Student's final one hour check flight was, "Flying Officer ****** started the engines and thereby initiated a sequence of events over which he appeared to have little or no control".
Hi. I have heard of that crash, but the one I'm working on is a different story. I may be in touch if when and if I look at the one you've mentioned. Thanks.
The expression 'all-aloominum death toob' was in use in Britain, as it had been heard being said by a US pilot, he was talking about the generation of all-missile short-range interceptors, such as the Sukhoi Su-7, -9 to -11s, the F-104 Starfighter, and the English Electric Lightning.
I would think all aircraft of the Lightning generation were a handful to fly. The Scimitar was far worse, the Sea Vixen also had a bad accident record. To say nothing of the American F-100 Super Sabre and F-104 Starfighter.
The Lightning had 'strip-gauges', typical of Morris cars at the time, to keep the very busy pilot informed about time in the air, fuel remaining and speed, three coloured strips to avoid the pilot looking down at three different 'clocks'. Basically, he didn't have time... ;-)
The skin of the Lightning was an aluminium alloy and the nose intake ring was of a more durable metal maybe nickel steel. Other stress bearing parts would be steel such as parts of the undercarriage.
I can’t believe that you kept the stupid “Aluminium Death Tube” banner especially after interviewing the pilot who was full of praise for the Lightning.
It was a fantastic plane; an interceptor designed to kill Russian bombers. I've spoken to an old RAF pilot today who only ever knew the name "Aluminium Death Tube" as being exciting descriptive of the Lightning's role. It would appear to be a matter of personal preference as to whether the name is an amusing reference to its purpose or a morbid description of supposedly flawed design. You are welcome to focus on whichever interpretation you want, but I'll stick to the former. Thanks.
@@oldergeologist Well, in all honesty, that is a matter of conjecture. Many Lightnings were lost during its time in the air and unfortunately so were a lot of the aircrew.
The point was twice the engines and it had reheat on its two Avons. As for the Hunter I was actually on holiday on the scene when the Hunter crashed in Tintagel. I've since read the unfortunate pilot's story and his verdict of the Hunter was damning if interesting. In addition to the Shoreham event with photos of the jet exhaust and the aircraft clearly in a climbing attitude suggesting no thrust from the engine. While the Thunder City tragedy seemed to be the result of a number of minor problems combining to create big implications for it's unfortunate pilot and loss of a valuable flying example. I think the government should have provided the resources for the RAF to keep one or two in flying condition for airshows.
In what way is it puerile? Read the pinned comment, and if you still feel strongly about this, I suggest you contact the Imperial War Museum and ask them to stop using this term for the Lightning as well.
Aluminium Death Tube was a common nickname for the Lightning in the 60s. See from about the 5 minute mark on this video from the Imperial War Museum. ruclips.net/video/YqD2DKvYyJE/видео.htmlsi=MUzgVxmW-HzEiX4A
Yup, the Austin Allegro of fighter jets..useless...lol. The lightning was fast and it run out of fuel before it reached the airfield perimeter. Then there was the armament, two useless missiles, and nothing else. As a fighter aircraft it was a joke, albeit a fast joke. Like the Allegro killed British Leyland, the Lightning killed British aircraft manufacturing, it was so bad, the RAF bought US aircraft after that. But the British are excellent at celebrating disasters, so the lightning enters folklore. A bit like Dunkirk really.
It wasn't a fighter lol! It was designed as an interceptor and probably one of the very best of the time.. But you are right about the Allegro, although the Marina was far worse.
It was designed to get up high, intercept and defend British Airspace from Soviet nuclear bombers. Long range was not part of the requirement. I suggest you read about the SR71 that was intercepted by two Lightenings around 75,000 feet, one to perform the interception and the second to take to photograph to prove it had happened. Also the English Electric Lightening was the only plane to successfully intercept Concorde in trials.
@@RichardBrake-fo4iw No Lighting ever intercepted an SR-71 Blackbird You may be talking about the U-2 intercepts. Two U-2's were used to simulate Soviet Bombers flying over the Baltic. This was a joint exercise between the RAF and the USAF.
Curiously, a few people seem to object to the nickname, "Aluminium Death Tube" for the Lightning, despite it being quite common amongst ground crew in the late 60s and early 70s.
The IWM website also refers to it by that name - www.iwm.org.uk/history/the-english-electric-lightning-which-was-accidentally-flown
Personally, I consider it to be an amusing name for a fantastic aircraft.
Hi Matt, this is not connected to the Lightning, but unsure of how else to contact you (apologies!). I’m a retired RAF pilot and well remember Tony Dobbie at RAF Valley in 1983. I’ve just taken delivery of his book, “Suki, Me & World War III”. If you have any contact details for him, would you be willing to forward him my email address? In order to give you my address, do you have a secondary email address that I could contact you on? Thank you!
@@awatchman9000 Hi. If you send an email over to AirForceAnecdotes@Gmail.com we can work it out from there.
@@awatchman9000I meant to add, Dobz is always keen to catch up with folks from his RAF days. Let me know if you don't have any luck with the email address.
Thanks Matt, much appreciated; will be dropping you an email very shortly.
It was made of stainless steel. Perhaps the "death tube" referred to its effect on its enemies.
Argentine Air Force pilot here.
During my year-long UN tour in Cyprus I visited RAF Akrotiry Air Base to attend the 2001 open day and see the Red Arrows air display. Upon entering the base I saw for the first time in my life a Lightning that was displayed there as a gate guard. It was a great experience for me.
Cheers!
I lived in Cyprus 1979-1980, as my dad was in the army. Incredible memories of rows of Lightnings at Akrotiri . The air filled with literally thunder and Lightnings.
@@rocketfueller When I was in Cyprus , Akrotiri was an overseas RAF base used for air deployment. During my stay there I was assigned to UNFICYP within the UN Protected Area (Nicosia) . My accommodation was opposite the officers' mess. Where did you live in Cyprus?
I lived in Episkopi., not far from Akrotiri.A great childhood, got to live in a lot of great places.@@astircalix4126
"You've never really been lost until you're lost at Mach 2". Classic! 🙂
Indeed 😄
great quote. lost at mach 2@@AirForceAnecdotes
Fantastic, amazing how these guys just speak about it as if "yip , I flew that"😊
@@gorbalsboy absolutely 😄
An ex RAF navigator told me the basis of all fast jet navigating was remembering; "you were only finding out where you used to be, and where you were going. It was never about where you actually were". I suspect those words were never more apt than when travelling at Mach 2.
As a pilot at 17 flying 100 MPH I got lost all the time. "You've never been lost until you're lost at Mach" two was the best line of your humble Lightning Pilot. Bravo!
Same as that!
Within 5 minutes of being off the field I wouldn't have a clue where I was in a country I'd spent 45 years in!
As a child at the Biggin Hill air show in the sixties , Lightening beat up the field . VERY low . The ground shook . It was deafening ! One of the best days of my life .😁
My dad flew the Lightning with 19 Sqn (92's sister Sqn) at Gütersloh in the late 60s. He loved it and enjoyed all the nicknames it had. He usually called it 'the Frightening' and often repeated the old line about it only having wings to keep the nav lights apart.
Brilliant 😄
Yes it used to really annoy the Gernans around Gutersloh I used to sit down near to the runway on my break and watch them come and go😊😊😊😊
My old Pop was flying Hunters at Gutersloh in 1966 and I well recall the first Lightnings arriving there soon after. The Boy Scout hut was on the edge of the peri-track and we would see them come past with their hoods up after landing. The pilots would all wave to us as we stopped to watch them cruise past. All the planes were silver polished alloy then and very posh compared to all the other camouflaged RAF aircraft. I recall impressive displays of mass take offs and vertical climbs until you couldn't see the aircraft any more (and I had perfect eyesight then). I recall also visiting one of their hangers with Father and being allowed to sit in one. I also recall that two were always on standby at the end of the runway with their pilots sitting ready to go. I think we were lucky to be there and experience these events. Amazing times and amazing people.
@@thedustofages That's lovely to read. Thank you. The two jets ready to go were called the Battle Flight (later known as Quick Reaction Alert, I think) My old man talked about how miserable it was, sitting in a shed during a West German winter.
@@Maxley..Yes just thinking of it now brings back the wonderful smell of jet fuel, the heat of the engines, air shimmering and the ear splitting roar and vibrations of take off. They were very loud aircraft weren't they and in fact, before they arrived, I heard one of the wives on our Hunter Squadron talking to Mother. A Hunter came over fast at low level and made everyone jump and the lady said "it will be worse when the Lightnings arrive".
Pop also did the Lightning course, but never joined a Sqn. I have a great photo of him standing with a group of fellow students in front of one. A number of them are sporting medals from WW2 and it brings home the realisation of just how far Britain's aeronautical achievements had come in that short time. Great to hear of your experiences and who knows? we may have met.
I spent 3 years doing major overhaul engine work on F3 & T5 Lightning’s at RAF Leconfield 60 MU before being posted to 56 sqdn RAF Akrotiri. At Leconfield the test pilot, Squadron Leader Dick Bell MBE took me up in XV328, a T5 for the ride of a lifetime. He allowed me to do most of the flight, making me a member of the ten ton club. I never heard them called a death tube, a frightning, yes.
We lived in West Germany in the 1960s and RAF Gutersloh was our nearest RAF base. It was our base for family air trooping. I went through there many times and it was always a thrill to see a Lightning.
My late father was stationed out in Goose bay with the Lightning in the 60's I believe. His last post was at Waddington on the Vulcan.
Yes low passes at air shows just below the speed of sound. When the sound came a split second after the plane. Wonderful memories
I was stationed at RAF Gütersloh 1970-1972 and worked in an office in a hangar at the end of the runway. There was a time when all Lightnings were serviceable and all of them (I think 36) were ordered up. What a sight! Shooting nearly straight up with both after burners glowing. Fantastic.
26 SQN RINGS A BELL.
Coolest thing i ever saw was at age 14 on a boat off the coast of Northumberland. 2 lightnings low level over the sea, so low the spray was higher than they were. Epic
Working in BAe Saudi in '86, the lightnings went home to be replaced by Tornados - as they left they came across lower and lower, the last on dodging the lampposts on the airfield and getting the viewing ground crew on airport steps to duck. Fab aircraft.
In 1997 I had the pleasure of meeting two RAF pilots on a training course at Warton who had flown the Lightning. They said it was a brilliant aircraft. Flying it was like being strapped to a rocket. It scared the pants off them and they absolutely loved it.
My uncle was an RAF QRA Lightning pilot for the majority of his carrier.
As a young boy in the ATC camped not far from the runway at RAF Wattisham during the height of the Cold War. Watched the Lightnings of 111 Squadron scramble in the middle of the night. Just epic!!!
I was serving as a CPL at Wattisham when 111 was there, circa 1973. The noise of freedom. Wattisham had plenty of grass for ATC cadets.
Had some good times at RAF Binbrook Crash Gate 3. In the last year of the Lightnings in RAF service
Well, if you'd like to share any of them, please get in touch via AirForceAnecdotes@Gmail.com
I worked near RAF Binbrook in the early 80s. You could always tell when a Lightning was taking off because the sound was deafening!
My great friend, drinking partner and band-mate, the late Wing Co. Gus Crockett, RIP, was a Lightning pilot for many many years. Used to love hearing of his flying adventures. Very much missed indeed.
There was that one time where a ground engineer was taxiing a Lightning down the runway with its canopy open following maintenance in order to do a systems check. The engineer accidentally knocked the throttle into the TOGA detent, lighting both afterburners and hurling the plane down the runway. By the time the unhappy engineer had recovered from being thrown backward into the seat there was not enough runway to stop the plane, so he took off and made a couple of terrifying orbits around the field before making a safe landing. During the takeoff roll, he narrowly missed a loaded fuel bowser that was crossing the runway, a Beverley transport plane at the end of the runway, and a junior school just beyond the runway end. Those were the days.
Apparently, he had flown light aircraft and was familiar enough with the controls to bring her back down..? Still, quite an upgrade from a single propeller to twin reheat with a deactivated ejection seat and no canopy 😄
Taffy Holden! I think that in addition to no canopy, helmet or comes, he elected to land with a tailwind (the wrong way) as there was the school. at the end of the "in to wind" approach, which meant a (likely) overshoot would have been disastrous. Bless him
He was an Engineering Officer and he opened the throttles too far during an engine ground run (which he had no training to do) and the aircraft jumped the chocks.
Yet another reason why groundcrew kept 'Engineering' Officers as far away from the aircraft as they could.
I saw him being interviewed. He seemed pretty traumatised - which is understandable. But what an incredible thing to do. Takeoff may have been largely involuntary, but to even get it to rotate and off the ground is amazing enough, let along bringing it back and landing it. The stuff of legends.
@Pico-hq7ws What an incredible story - and such a brave cool headed response to successfully land the aircraft down wind to avoid the school.
My favourite aircraft ever with the possible exceptions of the Sopwith Camel and the Spitfire. I remember going with the school RAF section to summer camp at Binbrook in the late 60s. Wonderful.
The Sopwith Camel is an unusual favourite, but they do "look right" somehow, a bit like the Mosquito.
I had the Airfix model with the lighting bolt decals 55yrs ago, and can remember seeing them { in the 60s it could only have been a lighting } flying so high but all you could see was the con trail moving so fast
They look amazing now so I imagine they must have looked incredible in the 60s and 70s.
I was into Airfix once upon a time. I'm half tempted to pick a kit up and try again 🤔
The Squadron with the Black & Gold lightning bolts either side of the roundel was 111 Squadron. They were based at RAF Wattisham in the early 70's along with 29 Squadron.
29 Squadron's badge was XXX in bright red letters (30 in Roman numerals). According to squadron history the squadron was formed in the days of biplanes made from wood, fabric and dope. A Painter and Doper was told to paint 29 in roman numerals on all the aircraft as a squadron identifier. He asked, "what's 29 in roman numerals" and was told X, X, I, X, so that's what he painted on the aircraft, an X, another X and one more X.
I was based at Wattisham from Oct '71 until April '73 before going to 56 Squadron at Akrotiri in Cyprus, a wonderful time and a great aircraft.
Had exactly the same experiences back in mid sixties 67 years old now
@@bobdylan7120 Cheers for that
The F104 Starfighter was more of an aluminium death tube, that was seriously dangerous.
The "death tube" moniker was (supposedly) more to do with the what the Lightning represented. From what I've heard, it was a nickname given to it before any of them crashed anyway.
To set forth in a silver lance and joust with the force's of darkness...Captain Lockheed and the Starfighters
@@alexmarshall4331 Bob Calvert?
Nicknamed the Widowmaker.
@@KapitanKremmen Yeah...sez it...the F104 G in particular 👉♾️👈
Always thought the Lightning was called the "Frightening" by its pilots, not "Aluminum Death Tube". But his description of the work load, really validates why the F-4 Phantom was designed to be operated by a two-man crew, pilot and a radar intercept officer. It would be very difficult for a single-pilot to maintain situational awareness in combat with that high work load. The RAF in the '70s would have been a fascinating place, with Lightnings, Phantoms, Harriers in service, and the Tornado being developed. Also, none of those supersonic jets are really recoverable from a spin, because they are "fuselage loaded" (long fuselage- to wing span ratio), and develop into a flat spin. That wasn't really a characteristic unique to the lightning.
It appears that the Lightning had quite a few nicknames. I'm working on a short video together that explores the subject.
As for flying and navigating at high-speed, I struggle to keep my car straight and level down the M6, so hats off to anyone who's flown a fast jet 😉
Fantastic
It was the first aircraft I marshalled straight out of training
I recall from my RAF days in the 1970's an RAF Hunter pilot transitioning to the Lightning. After his first solo he told his instructor that he had everything under control until he made his first mistake. He released the parking brake .
I remember the air displays at Hucknall Aerodrome when the Lightning would ‘stand on its tail’ and the ground would shake as it left the earth behind.
That was great ! I ordered mine on Amazon but without the radar......Free shipping too !!
I joined the RAF in 1979 and I loved the lightning but never saw one. I did see Phantoms at RAF kinloss next to the Nimrods both elegant aeroplanes but those random Phantoms really looked the part.
I saw the Lightning flying at the West Wycombe airfield airshow in the 70s. There was a very long delay in flying at the end of the afternoon, and I wondered if an announcement would soon come the airshow had finished. What I didn't know, was the long delay was due to an RAF Lightning. Looking from right to left, I spotted a low level aircraft approaching in the distance. It was a Lightning! When it reached runway centre point, on one afterburner, it went straight up into a vertical climb at a great rate of knots. Quite literally the ground shook where I was standing with the roar, as it rocketed straight up into a steep vertical climb, and through the low level cloud base. Simply amazing the RAF Lightning !
I saw similar at Chivenor in the 80's never forgotten it.
Ditto at shows at Halfpenny Green, regularly. Wonderful.
At Humberside 92 he finished his display in the same way, vertical into a clear blue sky until he vanished, then a small twinkle of sunlight as he rolled out at 60/65,000 ish.
@@markstainton9080 After that the Lightning did a few high speed passes on reheat, and then shot off into the distance with my ears still ringing. The whole display was over in no more than 10 minutes, with a very dull early evening and low level cloud base. In and out and gone in a flash! 👍⚡
Very much it's party piece ! 😉
I have just recently flown the Lightning simulator (at Tangmere) I was surprised at how stable it was. I had expected a twitchy helter skelter ride , but no , It was strait forward . Even the landing seemed reasonable even though it was at 160. But its a monster of an aircraft ! So big.
I didn't know that existed. I'll put it on the to-do list. Lightnings certainly were popular with those who flew them.
I knew a young man who worked on these'death tubes' and he related a comment by an American pilot given permission to fly one. WOW!! The biggest kick up the rear I have ever had. Translate into American terminology with emphasis.
Rumour has it, our USAAF friends were a little jealous of the Lightning, back in the day 👀😄
@@AirForceAnecdotesThe Starfighter hadn't worked out, you see... best look up the 'Lockheed Starfighter bribery scandal' to discover how the US aircraft industry reacts when it might lose money. ;-)
I was at Gutersloh 67 to 69. A radar engineer we sat on the side of the runway all day with the radar. The QRA lightning took off fairly regularly to scare back Russian aircraft from the Polish border. One day I saw one fitted with a belly tank return with no landing gear. The tank ripped away as it touched the runway (of course), it was empty but the residual fuel lit up the runway from one end to the other. Pilot recovered no problem.
The runway had an arrester net for brake failures. One day a german F104 (Widow maker) called mayday because of a fire warning. He was vectored to the runway in use and the net raised at the other end. However the Pilot saw the runway and just wanted to get down so made a steep approach on the wrong runway. The Net was hard to see from the back and he ran into it crashing a few yards down the runway. The pilot got out spitting nails to fins out "who put the F*%$ing net up". He calmed down when it was pointed out he had landed in the wrong direction.
Brilliant 👏 😄
My old man ex Lancaster crew was Intelligence officer at Geilenkirchen in the 60s when 92 were based there and had trip in the T4 two seater with the then Wing Commander Jo Gilbert. Became a member of the 1000 miles an hour club. Wonderful aircraft. Happy days.
I remember seeing one flying low over where I live, great memory.
The best 'asset' of the Lightning was seeing one taking off; accelerated down the runway, suddenly tipped up at about 80 degrees and woosh was gone - ! 😊
The best aircraft of its time!
It was greased lightning!
On exercise in northern Germany in '74 we were repeatedly strafed by these things. I didn't mind until the sergeant told us they frequently crashed.
I bet that kept you on your toes 😄
Confusing the Lightning with the F104 Starfighter I think. In all the time I was serving in Germany I never saw a Lightning and they were tasked as interceptors anyway.
@@bfc3057Yes there were, but in the air defence role. Of course at some point an aircraft or two could have taken part in a ground attack exercise but it would have been very rare. And they didn’t fall out of the sky like German F-104s
@@bfc3057 Acknowledged, just saying that Lightnings were highly unlikely to have been involved in ground attack as their role was interception of unidentified planes crossing into the Air Defence Intercept Zone on the Inner German Border. My understanding is that only two Lightnings were lost in their twelve years of service with RAFG.
Na lightnings were OK. It was the bloody Harrier that kept flipping.
My late Father did his national service as an airframe mechanic on the Canberra PR7s at Laarbruch in Germany he told me all sorts of stories of things that happened to aircraft.
Yeah, I think only the most serious incidents make it to the news and general public awareness - the rest, including all the near misses,is just 'part of the job...'
At about 1966/67 I was a motor mechanic in Dusseldorf - one of our customers was a Lightning pilot at Gutersloh, I returned his Hillman Imp of all things🤫 to the base one day and was told he was on patrol with his wingman along the East German border by Hannover and was directed to wait beside a hanger with the ground crew - within minutes they came over the runway as low as you like waggling wings and then a vertical climb - showboating ? Yes Thrilling ? You bet your bottom dollar ! Very much our last Hurrah !!
Brilliant 👏
I have only flown the EE Lightning in VR but even so it was terrifying at first, that and the Phantom F4 are the only 2 in VR that had me worried. Not counting the worst ever ME109. (for different reasons)
Some used to say the E.E. Lightning was as Aerodynamic as a BRICK and shouldn't really fly. But it was so fast along the runway that the only thing it could do to save the flight crews lives WAS to Fly and Oh my "Giddy Aunt" it was awesome.
better than S E X!
What about the story of Test Pilot who ejected from a vertical but facing downwards (!) Lightening about circa 150 feet from the ground???
I was an armourer on 19 (F) Squadron, RAFG from 1971 to 74, and we used to tell the pilots that they had 5 weapons on board. You could see them puzzling; two guns, 2 Firestreak missiles…? What else? We said you have an aircraft faster than anything in the sky, it’s your weapon of last resort because the Bears mustn’t get through!
Yeah, I've heard a similar explanation from an ex Lightning pilot. To some, the plane was a third missile if it came to it. Before my time, but I can imagine the threat of WW3 kicking off any minute was rather unsettling.
Russian Bears of course.
That's was great, thanks. I know some of the newer fighter / bombers have amazing performance, but they just don't compare to aircraft like the Lightning and F111. I knew an Aussie guy who wanted to fly the Lightning so badly he moved to England (long time ago). I hope he achieved his dream.
I always wanted to fly an F-15 but unfortunately the USAAF won't let you unless you're a qualified pilot and even then you could only fly it where they told you too. Pretty dull really.
Lol
Lightning pilots are called Wiwols - “When I was on Lightnings”
A Lightning crashed in Cape Town about 15 years ago, the pilot had no choice but to go down with the ship. The ejection seat failed. Its filmed on YT.
That's really sad to hear. It just reinforces how dangerous it is to fly fast jets. Even with all the training and safety procedures in place today, flying at high speed tests the best to the limit.
I wonder if the Lightning would be an easier aircraft to fly if it had todays modern tech.
I heard the Firestreak missiles it carried were nicknamed Firewood (ie being as much use as...)
Firesticks !
My old boss Sqn Leader E Jones RAF was a Lighting Display pilot a real gentleman RIP .
What's the use of full afterburner, and Mach 2, when you've got bugger all fuel and range?... A longer fuselage might have helped fuel capacity. 🤷♂
I was on 5 Sqn at Binbrook as an engineer and it took a lot to keep them flying.
I've heard that the Lightning was tricky to service, especially with the engines being stacked one above the other.
22 ton vim tin. Three landings on a set of mains ,if you were lucky. Permanent mobile fuel leak. Great aircraft.
I spent quite a while each day photographing 'scrubbed' or 'flat-spotted' Jaguar aircraft tyres. Heard that at the time, only Concorde and the Lighting used more tyres.
The Jag got better with mods, but...
We had a kite at Wattisham that leaked like a sieve (more than usual) but we could never trace the source.
In the end they painted the aircraft in a special (Pink) revealer paint and put an additive in the fuel that would turn the paint blue if it came into contact with it. Wait for the blue streaks and follow them back to the source of the leak(s) - easy right!
The damn thing flew for nearly a month without a trace of a leak! Eventually the pilots got so upset flying a pink lightning the paint was removed. Next flight the aircraft leaked like a sieve again!
Beautiful jet
The tanker finder would be a better nickname!
From my time in the RAF including the same period the saying was a quote from the Americans and was thus rendered as "Aluminum death toob" ! Great aircraft though. I flew transports but did a stint at Bawdsey and Boulmer as a Fighter Controller so I did have some experience from a different perspective of the Lightnings especially the Mark 3 version which, due to its extremely small fuel load was referred to as an accident waiting to happen every time one got airborne.
I'm sure there was an American jet with a similar nickname (F-104?) I wonder if it was borrowed, although the Lightning preceded the Starfighter.
I've read somewhere that they couldn't stay airborne for very long if the pilot really gave it some welly.
It was the first modern combat jet. Service men were not used to all the new technology. Today the Lightning would be looked upon as par for the course. Therefore I think the Lightning gets an unfair reputation as tricky to maintain and operate. It was not and led the way for combat aircraft that came subsequently. A sane country would have upgraded the radar he was talking about but this being the UK we did not develop another combat jet radar until the 1980s and the Fox Hunter radar which is why it took so long and had so many problems to get the Fox Hunter radar into service. Today we have perfected developing radars and maintained the momentum in doing so with the result we can relatively quickly and easily turn out new advanced radars. We have not taken a twenty year holiday and allowed all the expertise to retire and die off.
The Germans should have bought Lighnings instead of buying nearly a thousand (916) Lockheed F-104 Starfighters, of which 292 aircraft crashed and 116 pilots lost their lives.
Crikey that's a shocking statistic...
The Lightning was what it was for well thought out reasons & was defined by its mission requirements. Short range? There wouldn't be much warning of Soviet bombers. Simple radar? Come WW3 intercepts would be almost certainly under ground radar coverage. Etc etc.
Surely the 'aluminium death tube' would be better applied to the F104 Starfighter.
From what I've read the term might have been first uttered in the UK by American pilots, and some references to F-104s. Who really knows? 🤷🏼♂️
The expression 'all-aloominum death toob' was current in the RAF when I was in, up to the mid-1980s.
It referred to the then-standard US and Soviet all-missile interceptors such as the F-104 and the Mig-21 or Sukhoi Su-7, -9 & -11 series, then being replaced with later or improved versions, or rejected altogether and corruptly sold as a ground-attacker, as in the F-104's case.
The F-104G in German service definitely lived up to it's pilot-killing reputation, and in later years the enormous corruption and bribery scandal about it's acquisition by the German government broke, and then the guilty escaped scot-free.
I've been reading up on the origins of the name, and it does seem to have come kver from the US. Some Lightning pilots were of the view that the name applied as if/when WW3 began, there wouldn't be a home to go to and some concluded that their Lightnings would be used as a third and final missile to down Russian bombers. Rumour has it, the "aluminium death tube" moniker was common before any of them were involved in fatal accidents.
Subscribed old bean.
Welcome aboard. Please fasten your seatbelts and return your tray table to its full upright and locked position. ;)
The "Flt Lt" was wearing FO, Flying Officer, rank slides.
A rocket with wings. Zooooooooooooom.
Read somewhere’ it was all under control until l released the parking brake’
Never saw one fly, pity.
Yeah, there's a clip of an English Electric fitter on the IWM website where he mentions that quote. Funny stuff 😄
I once worked on an OCU (Operational Conversion Unit) where the examiner's comments on a Student's final one hour check flight was, "Flying Officer ****** started the engines and thereby initiated a sequence of events over which he appeared to have little or no control".
The quote was by FO Richard Pike, his two books of tales of the lightning are the best!@@bobdylan7120
Love it 😂
The Canberra ejection was in Saint Margaret children’s home If so, give me a shout.
Hi. I have heard of that crash, but the one I'm working on is a different story. I may be in touch if when and if I look at the one you've mentioned. Thanks.
So, NOT a death tube...
The expression 'all-aloominum death toob' was in use in Britain, as it had been heard being said by a US pilot, he was talking about the generation of all-missile short-range interceptors, such as the Sukhoi Su-7, -9 to -11s, the F-104 Starfighter, and the English Electric Lightning.
I would think all aircraft of the Lightning generation were a handful to fly. The Scimitar was far worse, the Sea Vixen also had a bad accident record. To say nothing of the American F-100 Super Sabre and F-104 Starfighter.
I heard that it never got an official safety certificate to fly !
😲
twice the thrust of a hunter? the hunter didn't have an afterburner. it's probably thrice the thrust of a hunter.
That is _one busy cockpit!_ Damn.
The Lightning had 'strip-gauges', typical of Morris cars at the time, to keep the very busy pilot informed about time in the air, fuel remaining and speed, three coloured strips to avoid the pilot looking down at three different 'clocks'.
Basically, he didn't have time... ;-)
Stolen from an SR 71 pilot who said “You have never been lost until you have been lost at Mach 3”.
Or perhaps simply paraphrased because the same amusing principle applies? 🤔
The skin was stainless steel. "Stainles steel death tube" doesn't have the same impact.
🤔 I can't argue with that. It's highly likely that the nickname came from America, and "Aluminum death toob" has an even better ring to it.
Agreed
@@AirForceAnecdotes
yes-i hoped someone would remember the steel. ✔️
There was some titanium at the hot-end & some steel around hard-points, but the majority of the fuselage skin was aluminium.
The skin of the Lightning was an aluminium alloy and the nose intake ring was of a more durable metal maybe nickel steel.
Other stress bearing parts would be steel such as parts of the undercarriage.
fk me clarkson was a fighter pilot?
interceptor akshully.
who knew?
no wonder he ribbed the other two about their flying licences.
The Frightening....
I can’t believe that you kept the stupid “Aluminium Death Tube” banner especially after interviewing the pilot who was full of praise for the Lightning.
I have no issue with it. I think it's a cracking nickname as do others.
@@AirForceAnecdotes But it gives the wrong impression. The Lightning was a good aircraft not a killer.
It was a fantastic plane; an interceptor designed to kill Russian bombers. I've spoken to an old RAF pilot today who only ever knew the name "Aluminium Death Tube" as being exciting descriptive of the Lightning's role.
It would appear to be a matter of personal preference as to whether the name is an amusing reference to its purpose or a morbid description of supposedly flawed design. You are welcome to focus on whichever interpretation you want, but I'll stick to the former. Thanks.
@@oldergeologist Well, in all honesty, that is a matter of conjecture. Many Lightnings were lost during its time in the air and unfortunately so were a lot of the aircrew.
14 pilots died flying it,from the book'The lightning boys'.
Stainless steel😊
More than twice the power as it had reheat. Mistake 1.
twice the engines he said
The point was twice the engines and it had reheat on its two Avons.
As for the Hunter I was actually on holiday on the scene when the Hunter crashed in Tintagel.
I've since read the unfortunate pilot's story and his verdict of the Hunter was damning if interesting.
In addition to the Shoreham event with photos of the jet exhaust and the aircraft clearly in a climbing attitude suggesting no thrust from the engine.
While the Thunder City tragedy seemed to be the result of a number of minor problems combining to create big implications for it's unfortunate pilot and loss of a valuable flying example.
I think the government should have provided the resources for the RAF to keep one or two in flying condition for airshows.
Ah ha, so it was an overated kitty
This is why this scrap was sold to Saudia and Kuwait in the 60's 😂
The pilot that actually flew the Lightning really shoots down your death tube BS.
What a rather puerile title! Clickbait of the worse type
In what way is it puerile?
Read the pinned comment, and if you still feel strongly about this, I suggest you contact the Imperial War Museum and ask them to stop using this term for the Lightning as well.
Remove the subtitles. they obscure the subject.
Click the CC icon to turn subtitles on and off.
So why did you put that stupid, inaccurate caption on top of your video picture? Channel blocked....
Aluminium Death Tube was a common nickname for the Lightning in the 60s. See from about the 5 minute mark on this video from the Imperial War Museum.
ruclips.net/video/YqD2DKvYyJE/видео.htmlsi=MUzgVxmW-HzEiX4A
You can't pronounce or spell aluminum correctly?
I'm guessing you're American? It's spelled "aluminium" in the UK 😄
www.thoughtco.com/aluminum-or-aluminium-3980635#:~:text=In%201808%2C%20Sir%20Humphry%20Davy,The%20official%20name%20%22aluminium%22%20was
Yup, the Austin Allegro of fighter jets..useless...lol.
The lightning was fast and it run out of fuel before it reached the airfield perimeter. Then there was the armament, two useless missiles, and nothing else.
As a fighter aircraft it was a joke, albeit a fast joke.
Like the Allegro killed British Leyland, the Lightning killed British aircraft manufacturing, it was so bad, the RAF bought US aircraft after that.
But the British are excellent at celebrating disasters, so the lightning enters folklore. A bit like Dunkirk really.
I can't like this or respond with a polite comment. Move along now 👉
It wasn't a fighter lol! It was designed as an interceptor and probably one of the very best of the time.. But you are right about the Allegro, although the Marina was far worse.
It was designed to get up high, intercept and defend British Airspace from Soviet nuclear bombers. Long range was not part of the requirement.
I suggest you read about the SR71 that was intercepted by two Lightenings around 75,000 feet, one to perform the interception and the second to take to photograph to prove it had happened.
Also the English Electric Lightening was the only plane to successfully intercept Concorde in trials.
@@RichardBrake-fo4iw No Lighting ever intercepted an SR-71 Blackbird You may be talking about the U-2 intercepts. Two U-2's were used to simulate Soviet Bombers flying over the Baltic. This was a joint exercise between the RAF and the USAF.
Not a joke when its guns and sidewinders are about to crease your ass. It was a fighter-interceptor, not a cruise ship.