Tuesday, August 28, 2012

CIAS - A Sure Sign That Vacations Are Soon Over

As the Labour (Labor) Day long weekend approaches, it’s once again time for the Canadian International Air Show.  The decision by the USAF to save its pennies through the elimination of the nearly all of the Air Combat Command Demonstration Teams has no doubt effected air shows across North America.  The CIAS has a very long history of close ties with the US armed services – especially the USAF – and the organizers have had to fill the gap with suitable aerial entertainment.

And it would appear that they have.  The lineup for the 2012 show includes the Canadian Forces CF-18 Demonstration Team and the Snowbirds – perennial favourites – plus demos by a restored former CF Canadair CT-133 (T-33 ‘T-bird’ to those outside of Canada), the Canadian Harvard Aerobatic Team and a CF CP-140 Aurora (looks like a US Navy P-3 Orion).  From my point of view, flypasts by (hopefully) multiple F-16s as only F-16s can do should make up for the missing ACC display and a Canadian Forces CC-130 Hercules/CF-18 air refuelling demo will be most welcome indeed.

Enough of my commentary.  You can check out the full list yourself at the following link:



(above) There’s usually something new or unique at the Canadian International Air Show and the star of last year’s show was this US Marine Corps MV-22 Osprey from VMM-365 at MCAS New River, North Carolina.  The unconventional bird was captured here by Krista Swan during a flypast with the rear loading ramp partially down.

Monday, August 27, 2012

First Man On The Moon Passes Away

Neil Armstrong
5 August 1930 – 25 August 2012


After a long hiatus, we’re back, spurred on in part by the death on Saturday of a legendary astronaut due to complications following cardiovascular surgery earlier in the month.  While hopefully most of today’s aviation enthusiasts or space aficionados may be familiar with the name, those of us who remember that day – 20 July 1969 when a human being set foot on a surface other than the Earth’s for the first time – will always link Neil Armstrong with what remains, arguably, humankind’s greatest technical achievement.

Hooked on airplanes and flying from an early age, he already had his private pilot’s licence and was studying aeronautical engineering at Purdue University when he was called for US Navy flight training in 1949.  As a Naval Aviator, he was assigned to fly Grumman F9F Panther fighters with VF-51 and went to war in the skies above Korea.  He survived 78 aircraft carrier-based combat missions – some barely – and returned home in early 1952.  Joining NACA, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics which paved the way for today’s NASA, he became a test pilot and was, like all of those fortunate enough to be involved in that elite activity, at the leading edge of advances in aerospace technologies during the golden age of test flying.

Born at a time when small, monoplane racers and high-performance military biplane fighters captured the public’s imagination, he ended up in the space business. He commanded the Gemini VIII mission which launched aboard a Titan rocket on 16 March 1966 and ran into dangerous, uncontrolled rolling problems while in orbit. Solving that issue and returning to an emergency ‘splash down’, he was later chosen to lead the Apollo 11 team to the Moon.  The astronauts – Neil Armstrong, Edwin ‘Buzz’ Aldrin and the oft forgotten but ever-essential Michael Collins – launched atop a Saturn V rocket on 16 July 1969.  With Collins in obit aboard Columbia, Armstrong and Aldrin in Eagle – the lunar module – headed towards a landing on the Moon which was certainly not without its share of problems.  The rest, as they say, is history.

 Following Apollo 11, he remained with NASA for a few years.  Born in Wapakoneta, Ohio, he returned to that state to become a Professor of Aeronautical Engineering at the University of Cincinnati.  Over the years he kept a relatively low profile but did, on occasion, appear for public speaking engagements.  Although apparently not bombastic by nature, a contributing factor in remaining out of the public spotlight must surely have been the continual harassment since the 1970s by folks in the conspiracy theory community.

Neil Armstrong was 82 years old.


(above)  For those interested in exploring Apollo 11 history in person, there are two places that should not be missed.  This banner, portraying the Apollo 11 insignia design, hangs at the Apollo / Saturn V Center at Kennedy Space Center, Florida.  The immense building, open to the public, houses items of interest including all Apollo mission insignia, a lunar module and an actual Saturn V rocket.


(above)  As the official repository for NASA-related historical items, the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum on the Mall in Washington, DC displays many items of significance to space flight.  Among the Apollo artifacts displayed is this lunar module.  LM-2 was the second one built but in the end was not required for a test flight.  It was, instead, used for ground training by NASA.  As an aside, if you are in the area and can make the short trip, the Smithsonian’s Udvar-Hazy Center at Washington-Dulles International Airport is a must-see air museum.

For those interested in further reading, here are two links of interest.