Posted on Jun 30, 2015
Capt Seid Waddell
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U.S. Navy Sailor Astronauts Q/A #3
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=64xcB-A8B0c
Posted in these groups: The milky way galaxy Space
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Responses: 7
PO1 Mike Edgecomb
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4.5 Years on the USS America CV-66 I heard them discuss landings all the time. Every landing is graded and put on a status board for all to see. Nothing more than a controlled crash.

Watched them successfully launch an F-14 Tomcat with locked brakes. The Captain calmly picked up the phone and called pri-fly to request that they contact the pilot and make sure he released the brakes before he tried to land.
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PO3 Sherry Thornburg
PO3 Sherry Thornburg
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Small world. My dad was on the America around the same time you were. Any chance you knew Photo mate Rusty Ledet? He mentioned a few bad landings and one he had to document that wasn't pretty.
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SSG John Jensen
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no, but I heard war stories from deck crews -
off the coast of Vietnam, the deck of the carrier is ready for hot reloads, the deck is covered with bombs; suddenly a sound like a 10 lb hammer on a slab of concrete, then from the loudspeakers "we have a live bomb, we have a live bomb, this is not a drill" people are going nuts, tearing their hair out, jumping over the side; the bomb handlers walk out, whistling "not this one, not this one", suddenly "here it is !" unscrews the fuse, and throws it over the side. And the carrier has to put incoming jets on hold while they pick up sailors who jumped overboard.
grew up in Lemoore CA, the bedroom community for Lemoore NAS
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CAPT Senior Principal Policy Analyst
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Great video. Being along for the ride is much tougher than being in control. Night carrier landings are sporty, especially in bad weather. But at least you have some control. Of course, if you screw it up, you're dead AND it's your fault. I'd sure like the chance to compare them with a reentry from space. Good stuff.
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