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![]() Some misnomers are in order here...when the US Army Air Force originally came with this idea in the late 30-early fortys, the term jet was used and not rocket, as jet aircraft were being developed at the time too. Of course, these strap on devices are rockets: They are a lot of thrust in a small package, and really allow the plane to get away quick. The term JATO passed over to the aircraft take off system over the years and was never properly changed. But the proper term can be RATO or JATO. Now the link you are going to see is truly a Jet Asissted Take Off...a concept called Zero Length Launch. They put a super RATO on a jet aircraft, started the aircraft and then shot it straight into the air. This concept accually worked...scary, but it worked. http://www.ninfinger.org/~sven/model...nes/zel06.html http://www.ninfinger.org/~sven/models/x_planes/zel.html |
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Boss: you're technically correct that they use rockets, but the Blue Angels do call it JATO for some reason.
Yo Robot: go back and correct the spelling, man -- it's ANGELS, not ANGLES. Actually, what really impresses me about the Blues is the fact that they don't wear G-suits. So they're pulling 7.5+ G's in their F/A-18's sans assistance -- just pure leg and gut muscles. If you go here, there's video footage of a fighter pilot going for a ride in Blue Angel #7 and constantly blacking out. It's funny -- the Blues pilot keeps saying things like "Goodnight, sweetheart, goodnight..." and "I've got to get you an alarm clock back there!" (WARNING: some language not suitable for children under the age of 17. ![]() |
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