The comically cartoonish font was the giveaway for me.Damnit, Chuck. If Ward Carroll makes even a penny from me having clicked that link before realizing it was him, I refuse to follow your links any more.

The comically cartoonish font was the giveaway for me.Damnit, Chuck. If Ward Carroll makes even a penny from me having clicked that link before realizing it was him, I refuse to follow your links any more.
No Ward C. involved!!Damnit, Chuck. If Ward Carroll makes even a penny from me having clicked that link before realizing it was him, I refuse to follow your links any more.
Commonly available software now to generate YouTube title images.The comically cartoonish font was the giveaway for me.![]()
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Commonly available software now to generate YouTube title images.
I get it!Okay. You can see why we were cautious though, right?
It's a Phrog!!!Who's more insulted by the "Baby Chinook" label? 46 or 47 drivers?
The Columbia CV-107IIs with N numbers are KV's and BV's with major upgrades and service life improvements.I am super curious bout the path to airworthiness and what restrictions come with operating a 46 with an N number.
I've been researching mast retaining nut installation, maintenance, pre-flight inspection, and incidents since theis occured.Not what I would have expected.
Was always taught that mast bumping would cause failure to the mast, not total drive system separation.Mast bumping?
Twitter said:Australia also used Mirage III, known as "Mirage IIIO"... Here, an Australian military salute made by 77 sqn of the RAAF during the 1970s.
It's a sign of the troops affection sir!More than one Marine General received this appropriate salute from the flight line as they taxied out to get some flight time in our squadron's aircraft. Oh such wonderful memories.
I saw a video by an aeronautical engineer who believes the cause was likely a catastrophic MRGB failure (actually locking up rather than breaking apart internally) and the sudden rotor stoppage actually ripped the mounting deck cleanly away from the fuselage. He believes the evidence will be found in the tension on the MRGB mounting struts that did not give way. He also notched that the tail separation was too close to the body to entertain mast bumping. If this is accurate that surely must be a very rare event.NTSB recovering wreckage of the 206L4 mishap. The picture is very interesting. In-tact rotor/mast/transmission and support assembly. Not what I would have expected.
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Interesting and plausible explanation! Scary as f*ck.I saw a video by an aeronautical engineer who believes the cause was likely a catastrophic MRGB failure (actually locking up rather than breaking apart internally) and the sudden rotor stoppage actually ripped the mounting deck cleanly away from the fuselage. He believes the evidence will be found in the tension on the MRGB mounting struts that did not give way. He also notched that the tail separation was too close to the body to entertain mast bumping. If this is accurate that surely must be a very rare event.