Thanks Ken, some good thinking there, I suggest.
Please note
Yankeepapa's post folks.
The Flying Legends show has the final Balbo break being done from echelon formation in some of the years earlier - based on my recollection and photographs. (I wasn't there in 2011, or 2005-07, 2009-present, so can't comment.)
The Balbo has required the recovery of between 20 and nigh-on 40 aircraft in a relatively short time period, to a pair of parallel runways, one grass, one metal.
I'm not sure there's any 'RAF heritage' type reasons, nor do I know when or how often Vic were used. (I vaguely recall 'box' formations too, but not if they were used to break for landing from.) The intensity, density and complexity of the Flying Legends display is exceptional, compared to the vast majority of equivalent warbird-type shows around the world. It could be safer, as most shows (sadly) could, but I didn't start a safety-orientated thread for incomplete-data speculation. It would be easy to ask TFC rather than speculating and drawing erroneous conclusions, or back-form theories - however that's not what this thread is about.
Also remember some of the US' best warbird airshow pilots are regular participants of the Flying Legends show - they are known to the pilot posters, so offline person-to-person discussions are perfectly viable, avoiding any transatlantic assumptions or language barriers.
A more useful derivative discussion would be the recommendation (really a 'thought floated') in the AAIB report:
Quote:
"...He was fortunate that his injuries did not prevent him from operating his parachute deployment mechanism. Had he been incapacitated, there was no automatic means, such as a static line, for deploying the parachute. The low height also meant that the parachute had to be deployed as soon as the pilot had cleared the aircraft structure. As a result, the following Safety Recommendation is made:
Safety Recommendation 2011-083
It is recommended that the Civil Aviation Authority considers, where a parachute is worn as safety equipment, whether the provision of an automatic means of operating the parachute would provide a safety benefit."
Let's assume this could be a pilot / owner driven idea, rather than an authority one (that's not actually important in terms of safety). I'm sure most can see the issues as well as the possible benefits here, so thoughts?
Regards,