Thanks John for the information there! Just so that all the WIX'ers understand, any time you're doing A2A, safety is the foremost concern. Don't get the impression that John was about to keel over but flew anyway, not the case. Mark and I spent a good 45 minutes to an hour with him before flying, briefing, double-checking that he was okay health-wise.
I also was prepared that in the case of an emergency (as in all flights, unless the rear stick has been removed...), I could take over. I have no tail-dragger time, but knew that I could handle the Stinson on the grass of New Garden with no problem.
We briefed thoroughly, with Mark and John picking the altitude (good call), higher than I'd originally planned, but it was clear enough that the banking shots really put Mark "in the clouds" when in fact we were about 2500 feet below them at least. We were 1500 AGL for this flight, and I again can't say how impressed I was with Mark and John's formation work.
I've been in a couple of uncomfortable situations where the photo-plane or subject aircraft did something totally contrary to the briefing, and it's no fun. This had 100% communication from the initial discussion to post-flight conversation. |Matt Chapman was on the ground too to give us his impression... "oh, did you fly, I was talking R/C here by the hangar and never noticed".
Weather was almost perfect, so there were no issues with "rushing" the flight. It was a pleasure meeting John's lovely wife too. We weren't about to let anything happen to him, or the plane.
Oh, Russ does fly that B-25 superbly too! His "circuits" were impressive (he knows that airport like the back of his hand), and he always gives you a slightly different angle on the plane with every pass.
Rich