Hangar Flying

Hangar Flying
Author: Alfred J. D'Amario
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 297
Release: 2008
Genre: Flight
ISBN: 1434355292

Flying is sometimes defined as "hours and hours of sheer boredom punctuated by moments of stark panic." In HANGER FLYING, Lt/Col Alfred J. D'Amario shares many of those "moments of stark panic" that punctuated the 5,000 or so flying hours he accumulated during his twenty years in the Air Force. The author, who much prefers to be called Joe, takes the reader through Basic and Advanced pilot training, transition to jets, fighter gunnery and fighter bomber training and real combat inKorea. Then there are six years of "peace time" flying in Training Command followed by eleven years of Cold War missions in the six engine B-47 and eight engine B-52. But, Hanger Flying is about in-flight emergencies and hair-raising experiences, not about the hours and hours of just boring holes in the sky. Hanger Flying (the practice, not the book) is what assembled pilots do when they aren't flying. It is a "Can you top this?" exercise in story telling. And that is what the author does in this easy reading, fast paced account of many of the close calls he had both in and out of combat.

How to Fly a Piper Cub

How to Fly a Piper Cub
Author: Piper Aircraft Corporation
Publisher:
Total Pages: 31
Release: 1945
Genre: Airplanes
ISBN:

Betjeningsforskrift og instruktionsbog for Piper Cub.

Hangar Flying

Hangar Flying
Author: Merrill A. McPeak
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre: Cold War
ISBN: 9780983316008

"General Merrill A. "Tony" McPeak was the 14th chief of staff of the US Air Force. Hangar Flying is a memoir of his early service in fighter squadrons, a story about military flying in the tumultuous 1960s. The book may be regarded as a primary source for understanding what happened in front-line aviation units when the Berlin Wall went up, during the Bay of Pigs invasion or the Cuban missile crisis, at the height of our presence in South Vietnam, or just day to day during the long facedown with the Soviet Union. surely only a handful of military officers had a ringside seat for so much of the Cold War, in so many of its settings."--Back cover.