-- 30,000 people came (the papers said 60,000, but I am told 30,000 tickets were actually collected)
-- 8 aerobatic sorties by Bill Wright’s RV-4 and Meynard Halili’s Super Decathlon
-- 23 balloons, including the returning Festo blimp
-- 18 party balloons popped by airplanes in the balloon-bursting contest, out of 66 launched: better than 25% hit rate!
-- All 4 military services flew in the show – Air Force S.211s, Navy Cessna 172 and Britten Islander, Army Cessna 172, and Coast Guard Bo155
-- 5 JET aircraft aerobatic sorties!
-- 1 PAF S.211 did impromptu high- and low-speed flybys after a training sortie at nearby Basa air base
-- 1 S.211 aerobatic display, by a solo demonstration pilot of the PAF Blue Diamonds
-- 3 impressive flybys by the privately-owned Dornier Alpha Jet, which was also on static display
-- 81 skydivers and paratroopers in a 1 single C-130 load, on Saturday
-- 37 static line paratroopers looking like the Normandy invasion!
-- 44 free-fall skydivers in a mass drop, from that same C-130 load
-- 40-50 aircraft movements or cycles per day, a total of 360 takeoffs and landings over 4 days
-- 12 children lost and then found their wandering parents
-- 6 lost wallets, 3 of which were recovered and returned
-- 3 lost cell phones, none returned; 1 bunch of keys found, no claim
-- 1 bottle of sunscreen totally used up by ‘Mike Oscar’ and me
-- 2 memory cards at 2.0Gb each, totally filled up
-- 751 digital pictures
-- 5 handheld radio batteries totally emptied
-- Zero accidents
-- Zero incidents
-- Zero injuries from aircraft operations
-- Zero delays and Zero cancellations of any airline flights at DMIA
Not bad for an air show held at an active international airport!
I can’t even count the skydiving jumps were made during the 4 days. I do know we cleared far more skydiver aircraft lifts than were planned.
I don’t know how many pilots flew. We had 60 balloon and airplane pilots at the Wednesday pre-Fiesta briefing.
I think Feb 10, Saturday was the best day.
The flag jump was perfectly timed just as the sun came over the horizon. The band broke into the national anthem just as the flag unfurled.
Sounds simple, but takes a lot of coordination between the airplane pilot, Clark Tower, Fiesta Control, the Air Boss and the band leader. Real time.
All 20 hot air balloons slated for the Hare and Hounds race that morning left the ground (usually some balloons always have a reason to abort).
Another 4 hot air balloons were tethered at the ramp area for public rides.
The Festo blimp, the only maneuverable airship at the Fiesta, untiringly circled the entire pack all the way to the horizon (the word “dirigible” derives from the French diriger, which means ‘to direct’).
Both Malaysian motorized paragliders escorted the 20 balloons all the way to their touchdowns, several kilometers away (the Malaysian paragliding team had canopies designed for cross-country flight.) They looked for all the world like the fighter airplanes escorting the big bombers in WW2
Then it was time for the Bill and Meynard show.
Bill Wright and Meynard Halili, in the RV-4 and Super Decathlon, flew formation passes over the field, then broke off to fly individual aerobatic routines in a show that lasted almost 45 enthralling minutes.
Here’s a video of Bill Wright doing a Cuban Eight, then calling for a landing at Omni, where he based his RV-4, RP-S1440
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I7yAWxh21sI
Meynard flew his usual exuberant routine. I could just see him in my mind's eye. Having flown aerobatics with him in that Decathlon, I knew exactly the cocktail of serenity and exhiliration he was mixing in that shaker up there.
Then, a surprise treat! The previous day, Friday, we persuaded an Air Force S.211 pilot on a training mission out of Basa to swing by Clark for some nice low- and high-speed passes for the crowd.
On Saturday, the Air Force did even better. Major Armand A., who flew the solo slot in the Blue Diamonds aerobatic team, flew a tight, high-energy aerobatic routine especially for the Fiesta, never straying out of the show box.
Here’s are videos of Maj Ardie’s aerobatic display. I found the Derry turns interesting – reversing course in a teardrop turn without losing sight of the show line. Maj Ardie explained it to me on the ground after the show, and I can’t wait to try it in 1513
Nice videos, worth the quick download.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-pRGiu_WZI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZogYNI8qg4Q
In the last one he does 2 high-speed aileron rolls then goes straight into an overhead recovery, gear coming down and a short approach onto runway 02R. What the military calls a 'combat approach'.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bHz_mERmSEA
Then we had the skydivers.
We had aircraft shuttling endlessly for multiple lifts. Army 101, a Cessna 172, Angel 662, the 505th SAR Huey, and Navy 321, the Islander, were all pressed into service all morning and afternoon for skydiving lifts.
The green and gold canopied Philippine Army skydivers flew an impressive show that day. They had a three-man stack – skydivers ‘riding’ the leading edge of the canopy of another skydiver below.
One skydiver broke away. Buddy Lopa, our mini air boss and the untiring “voice” on the sound system throughout the show, kept telling the crowd to watch for the two skydivers to break away.
But they never did!
Here’s a video of that event. Nearly everyone in the crowd jumps up at the end to give them a standing ovation.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xs2FKdzOino
Then the C-130 Hercules launched, with an awesome 81 skydivers and paratroopers on board.
It disgorged 16 static line paratroopers on the first pass, and 21 on the next pass. It was like A Bridge Too Far
Then, as if unsatisfied, the big Herc went higher, to 12,000 feet, and unloaded a mass drop of 44 skydivers, the most I’ve ever seen in the air at one time. More impressively, this was a free-fall jump, and the crowd went nuts as canopy after canopy blossomed almost simultaneously over the Fiesta grounds.
We had had a flag jump, hot air balloons, 3 sets of aerobatics by taildraggers and jets, and a mass drop of 81 skydivers.
And it was only 10am!
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