Primarily for general aviation discussion, but other aviation topics are also welcome.
  • 1
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • 25
  • 26
By JodelDavo
#1771054
I flew night parachute drops some 20 years ago. They haven’t done it for years and I think it all stopped after somebody got injured. I’m not a skydiver myself so I don’t know if any parachute centres still do night jumps.

The aircraft descent couldn’t really be started until all the jumpers were on the ground but was good fun to do something a bit different.

The skydivers wore cyalume light sticks on their suits for visibility
Iceman, AlanC, AshleyFlynn23 liked this
User avatar
By tomshep
#1771059
Red, they are telling fibs. The lighting might have been put out on the runway but it does not work and it will not work until the design engineer responsible for the system reinstates it because it is both unconventional and fairly ingeniously contrived. It will no longer be operable without some work in the software which was switched off remotely.

The designer is on record as saying that it will be reinstated when Satan skates to work - and I should know!
kanga liked this
By chevvron
#1771127
JodelDavo wrote:I flew night parachute drops some 20 years ago. They haven’t done it for years and I think it all stopped after somebody got injured. I’m not a skydiver myself so I don’t know if any parachute centres still do night jumps.

The aircraft descent couldn’t really be started until all the jumpers were on the ground but was good fun to do something a bit different.

The skydivers wore cyalume light sticks on their suits for visibility

The SAS used to do night drops (often HALO too) in the '80s at Queens Parade DZ just across the A325 from Farnborough airport, but I didn't tell you that.
User avatar
By FlarePath
#1771193
The SAS used to do night drops (often HALO too) in the '80s at Queens Parade DZ just across the A325 from Farnborough airport, but I didn't tell you that.


:sleeping:
User avatar
By Gustosomerset
#1868990
The Salisbury Journal reports that the owners have lost their latest (and perhaps most spectacularly ill-advised) legal battle to secure planning consent at Old Sarum. https://www.salisburyjournal.co.uk/news/19557062.wiltshire-council-successful-old-sarum-airfield-legal-battle

By my reckoning that's a 4-0 defeat: Planning application, appeal, judicial review, court case. It's hard to imagine what avenues the developers have left.

One can only hope that they may sell up and allow the airfield to re-open....but, with cost awarded against them in this latest case, they will have lost millions by now...
Rob P, Iceman, FrankS and 2 others liked this
User avatar
By Iceman
FLYER Club Member  FLYER Club Member
#1868999
I heard a PA28 coming out of there recently so not just parachuting activity at the moment ?

Iceman 8)
By Loco parentis
#1869025
Gustosomerset

That is excellent news. As one of the original opposition to Blanefield's machinations and a user of OS these past thirty years, it could not be better.

Incidentally, it is worth recording that the structural decline of the remaining hangers was due solely to a policy of managed maintenance avoidance.
User avatar
By Gustosomerset
#1869128
Agree. Following this victory, it would be good to think that the council will now be motivated to pursue the owners to meet their obligations under listed building regulations and restore the deliberately neglected hangars.
  • 1
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • 25
  • 26