Bill Greenwood wrote:
Good explanation Paul. One thing I wonder about in the L-39s is if the pilot training and/or judgement is as good as it could or shoud be. I am in unfamilar ground here, I wasn't at Reno, have only one brief jet dual jet flight in as Soko, and know little about L-39s. But I do know that they are heavily marketed, and one of the selling points seems to be how easy they are to fly and service. I would guess some jet racers are ex military jet pilots, but I wonder if others are at the low end of experience or training. If an L-39 is easy to fly, does that mean you have a lot of extra margin of safety, or does it mean it attracts less competent pilots? I think Bear or Strega or Dago are mostly flown by the cream of the crop. They better be, since they have a lot of maydays. And Ryan, they aren't at 380, I am certain both Bear and Strega have run at over 480 mph, and back when the speeds were valid before they computer boosted them. And just wait til Gary gets my spare Merlin in his Cassut, we just have a slight CG problem to solve.
Bill,
As jet warbirds go, the L-39 is a relatively easy, docile aircraft to fly making it attractive to a wider base of warbird pilot-owners, not just those with high-test flying experience. I would characterize it as the kerosene T-34 for comparison sake. Over the years, a number of guys that owned T-28s sold them and got into L-39s instead for the reasons you stated--low maintenance, extensive parts/tech support community, great reliability and for what it is, reasonably forgiving flight characteristics. IMHO, it does attract a notably less experienced pilot base, an airplane most can handle fine but a daunting undertaking for some. If it seems like you hear more about L-39 incidents/accidents than other jet warbirds, the big reason is there's so many of them flying (over 300 in the USA last I heard). As with all warbird types and classes, the quality of training, currency etc. for this type is all over the map. This leads us back to the bigger issue Doug R. raised on safety and training so I won't reiterate that here. I got no dog in this fight as far as jets racing at Reno but see no reason why they shouldn't next year. I'm sure the tragic accident will be looked at closely for any potential lessons to be learned. The unlimited guys do a great job employing safety practices successfully in a very challenging environment and I'm confident the jet racing side of RARA can/will do the same, though I believe their problem to be more a perception issue. A point to ponder--with the reliability of turbine engines, you won't see the engine failures in jets with the frequency in the other classes, if at all.