Ejection Seat Safety: "Man On The Hot Seat" 1963 US Air Force Training Film
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USAF training film reminding aircraft maintenance personnel that the pilots' lives are in their hands. A plane crashes on the runway, becoming a huge fireball. The
F-100 Super Sabre pilot couldn't eject due to a maintenance error--but his ghost hangs around for the investigation.
US Air Force Training Film TF-5489.
Public domain film from the
US National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ejection_seat
In aircraft, an ejection seat (or ejector seat) is a system designed to rescue the pilot or other crew of an aircraft (usually military) in an emergency. In most designs, the seat is propelled out of the aircraft by an explosive charge or rocket motor, carrying the pilot with it. The concept of an ejectable escape crew capsule has also been tried.
Once clear of the aircraft, the ejection seat deploys a parachute.
Ejection seats are common on certain types of military aircraft
...
A bungee-assisted escape from an aircraft took place in 1910. In
1916 Everard Calthrop, an early inventor of parachutes, patented an ejector seat using compressed air.
The modern layout for an ejection seat was first proposed by
Romanian inventor
Anastase Dragomir in the late
1920s. The design, featuring a parachuted cell (a dischargeable chair from an aircraft or other vehicle), was successfully tested on 25
August 1929 at the
Paris-Orly Airport near
Paris and in
October 1929 at
Băneasa, near
Bucharest. Dragomir patented his "catapult-able cockpit" at the
French Patent Office.
The design was perfected during
World War II. Prior to this, the only means of escape from an incapacitated aircraft was to jump clear ("bail out"), and in many cases this was difficult due to injury, the difficulty of egress from a confined space, g forces, the airflow past the aircraft, and other factors.
The first ejection seats were developed independently during World War II by Heinkel and
SAAB.
Early models were powered by compressed air and the first aircraft to be fitted with such a system was the
Heinkel He 280 prototype jet-engined fighter in
1940. One of the
He 280 test pilots, Helmut Schenk, became the first person to escape from a stricken aircraft with an ejection seat on
13 January 1942 after his control surfaces iced up and became inoperable...
In
1958, the
Convair F-102 Delta Dagger was the first aircraft to be fitted with a rocket-propelled seat. Martin-Baker developed a similar design, using multiple rocket units feeding a single nozzle. The greater thrust from this configuration had the advantage of being able to eject the pilot to a safe height even if the aircraft was on or very near the ground...
Following an accident on 30 July 1966 in the attempted launch of a
D-21 drone, two
Lockheed M-21 crew members ejected at
Mach 3.25 at an altitude of 80,
000 ft (24,000 m) The pilot was recovered successfully, but the launch control officer drowned after a water landing.
Despite these records, most ejections occur at fairly low speeds and altitudes...
The purpose of an ejection seat is pilot survival. The pilot typically experiences an acceleration of about 12–14 g (
117–
137 m/s2).
Western seats usually impose lighter loads on the pilots; 1960s-70s era
Soviet technology often goes up to 20–22 g (with
SM-1 and KM-1 gunbarrel-type ejection seats)
..
The minimal ejection altitude for
ACES II seat in inverted flight is about
140 feet (43 m) above ground level at
150 KIAS, while the
Russian counterpart -
K-36DM has the minimal ejection altitude from inverted flight of
100 feet (30 m)
AGL. When an aircraft is equipped with the
Zvezda K-36DM ejection seat and the pilot is wearing the КО-15 protective gear, he is able to eject at airspeeds from
0 to 1,400 kilometres per hour (870 mph) and altitudes of 0 to 25 km (16 mi or about 82,000 ft). The K-36DM ejection seat features drag chutes and a small shield that rises between the pilot's legs to deflect air around the pilot.
Pilots have successfully ejected from underwater in a handful of instances, after being forced to ditch in water.
Documented evidence exists that pilots of the US and
Indian Navies have performed this feat.
As of 20 June
2011 – when two
Spanish Air Force pilots ejected over
San Javier airport – the number of lives saved by Martin-Baker products was 7,402 from 93 air forces.
The company runs a club called the 'Ejection Tie
Club' and gives survivors a unique tie and lapel pin. The total figure for all types of ejection seats is unknown, but may be considerably higher.,,