U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds: Διαφορά μεταξύ των αναθεωρήσεων

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[[Image:F-16 Fighting Falcons above New York City.jpg|thumb|300px|Οι Thunderbirds κατά τη διάρκεια επίδειξης στη Νέα Υόρκη]]
{| class="infobox bordered" style="width: 25em; text-align: left; font-size: 95%;"
[[Image:Thunderbird logo.jpg|thumb|250px|Το έμβλημα των Thunderbirds]]
|+ style="font-size: larger;" | '''Thunderbirds'''
[[Image:Thunderbirds diamond.jpg|thumb|250px|Οι Thunderbirds σε σχηματισμό «Διαμάντι»]]
|-
[[Image:F-84F Thunderbirds.jpg|thumb|250px|Αεροσκάφη F-84F Thunderstreaks των Thunderbirds, την δεκαετία του 1950]]
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | [[Image:Thunderbirds_@_Nellis.jpg|300px]] Thunderbirds lined up at [[Nellis AFB]], [[Las Vegas, Nevada]]
[[Image:Crash.arp.600pix.jpg|thumb|250px|Δευτερόλεπτα πριν από την συντριβή ο πιλότος του F-16 των Thunderbirds το εκταταλείπει με ασφάλεια]]
|-
! Country:
| [[United States]]
|-
! Aircraft Currently Flown:
| 12 [[F-16]]Cs
|-
! Sponsor:
| [[United States Air Force]]
|-
! Base Airfield:
| [[Nellis Air Force Base]]
|-
! Colors:
| Red, White and Blue
|-
! Date Formed:
| [[June 1]], [[1953]]
|-
! Crest/Logo:
| [[Image:Thunderbirds Air Demonstration Squadron.png|250px]]
|-
| colspan="2" style="font-size: smaller;" | {{{footnotes|}}}
|}
The '''Thunderbirds''' are the Air Demonstration Squadron of the [[United States Air Force]]. As such, they tour the United States and much of the world, performing aerobatic formation and solo flying in specially-marked USAF jet aircraft.
 
Οι '''Thunderbirds''' είναι η Μοίρα Αεροπορικής Επίδειξης της Πολεμικής Αεροπορίας των [[ΗΠΑ]], η οποία περιοδεύει τόσο στις Ηνωμένες Πολιτείες όσο και στο εξωτερικό δίνοντας επιδείξεις. Οι Thunderbirds χρησιμοποιούν δώδεκα [[αεροσκάφος|αεροσκάφη]] [[F-16 Fighting Falcon]] και έχουν έδρα την αεροπορική βάση Νέλλις στην [[Νεβάδα]].
Officers serve a two-year assignment with the squadron, while enlisted personnel serve three to four. Replacements must be trained for about half of the team each year, providing a constant mix of experience.
 
==Ιστορία==
The squadron performs no more than 88 air demonstrations each year and has never canceled a demonstration due to maintenance difficulty. In addition to their air demonstration responsibilities, the Thunderbirds are part of the USAF combat force and a component of the [[57th Wing]]. If required, the team's personnel and aircraft can be rapidly integrated into a fighter unit at [[Nellis Air Force Base]], [[Nevada]].
 
Η Μοίρα δημιουργήθηκε την [[1 Ιουνίου]] [[1953]] στην αεροπορική βάση Luke της [[Αριζόνα]], με το όνομα '''3600η Ομάδα Αεροπορικών Επιδείξεων''' χρησιμοποιόντας αεροσκάφη [[F-84 Thunderjet]]. Παράλληλα η ομάδα χρησιμοποιούσε ένα αεροσκάφος [[T-33 Shooting Star]] ως το αεροσκάφος του εκφωνητή καθώς και για πτήσεις επισήμων και δημοσιογράφων. Μέχρι τον Αύγουστο του 1953 η μοίρα είχε δώσει 26 επιδείξεις. Την επόμενη χρονία έδωσαν την πρώτη τους επίδειξη στο εξωτερικό, στην [[Νότια Αφρική]]. Το [[1955]] άρχισαν να χρησιμοποιούν αεροσκάφη [[F-84F Thunderstreak]], με τα οποία συμμετείχαν σε 91 επιδείξεις. Το [[1956]] οι Thunderbirds άλλαξαν πάλι αεροσκάφος, χρησιμοποιόντας το [[F-100 Super Sabre]], το οποίο έδωσε στην ομάδα την ικανότητα υπερηχιτικής πτήσης. Παράλληλα, την ίδια χρονιά η ομάδα μετακόμισε στην νέα της έδρα, στην αεροπορική βάση Νέλλις της [[Νεβάδα]].
==History==
The Squadron was activated, after 6 months training in an unofficial status, on [[June 1]], [[1953 in aviation|1953]] as the '''3600th Air Demonstration Team''' at [[Luke Air Force Base]] in [[Arizona]]. They flew their debut exhibition at Luke a week later, and began public exhibitions at the 1953 [[Cheyenne Frontier Days]] in [[Cheyenne, Wyoming]]. The team had flown 26 shows by that August. The first team leader was Major General Dick Catledge, and the first plane flown by the squadron was the [[F-84 Thunderjet]]. As the F-84G Thunderjet was a single seat fighter, a 2 seat [[T-33 Shooting Star]] served as the narrator's aircraft and was used as the VIP/Press ride aircraft. The T-33 served with the Thunderbirds in this capacity in the 1950s & 1960s.
 
Το [[1963]] οι Thunderbirds έδωσαν τις πρώτες τους επιδείξεις στην [[Ευρώπη]], ενώ το [[1964]] χρησιμοποίησαν και για ένα σύντομο χρονικό διάστημα το [[F-105 Thunderchief]]. Επέστρεψαν όμως στο F-100 το οποίο κρίθηκε πιο έυκολο στον χειρισμό κατά τη διάρκεια των ακροβατικών.
The next year, the Thunderbirds performed their first overseas air shows, in a tour of South America. A year later, [[1955 in aviation|1955]], they moved to the [[F-84F Thunderstreak]] aircraft, in which they performed 91 air shows. The aircraft of the squadron was again changed in June [[1956 in aviation|1956]], this time to the [[F-100 Super Sabre]], which gave the pilots supersonic capability. This switch was accompanied by a move of headquarters to [[Nellis Air Force Base]], [[Nevada]] on [[June 1]] with their first show after the move being held on [[June 23]]. It also signaled a shift in their performance routine—for example, the Cuban 8 opening routine was dropped, and emphasis was placed on low, screaming flyovers and demonstrations of takeoff performance. For a time, if the show's sponsor permitted it, the pilots would create a "[[sonic boom]]" (this ended when the [[Federal Aviation Administration|FAA]] banned supersonic flight over the continental U.S.)
 
Το [[1967]] οι Thunderbirds έδωσαν τη χιλιοστή τους επίδειξη. Το [[1969]] η ομάδα παρέλαβε τα τεράστια και θορυβώδη [[F-4 Phantom II|F-4E Phantom]], τα οποία χρησιμοποίησε μέχρι το [[1973]]. Αυτή ήταν και η μόνη περίοδος που οι Thunderbirds χρησιμοποίησαν τον ίδιο τύπο αεροσκάφους με τους [[Blue Angels]], καθόσον ο τύπος βρισκόταν σε υπηρεσία τόσο με την Αεροπορία όσο και με το Ναυτικό. Η πετρελαϊκή κρίση του 1973 όμως ανάγκασε την ομάδα να αφήσει το Phantom και να στραφει στο οικονομικότερο [[T-38 Talon]], ένα υπερηχιτικό εκπαιδευτικό αεροσκάφος βασισμένο στο [[F-5 Freedom Fighter]]. Είναι χαρακτηριστικό ότι πέντε T-38 απαιτούσαν την ίδια ποσότητα καυσίμου που χρειαζόταν ένα μόνο F-4 Phantom.
In [[1960 in aviation|1960]] a decision was made to allow the tail ([[vertical stabilizer]]) of the #4 slot plane, blackened by the exhaust of the other planes, to remain black. (Contrary to rumor, the stabilizer was never painted black.) This practice remained in force through the 1973 season. In [[1961 in aviation|1961]], the team was compelled to discontinue the vertical bank maneuver due to an [[FAA]] regulation prohibiting aerobatics that pointed the nose of the aircraft toward the crowd. [[1962 in aviation|1962]] saw the introduction of dual solo routines, and the Thunderbirds went on their first European deployment in [[1963 in aviation|1963]], the year after the disbanding of the "Skyblazers" (see below). The team switched to the [[F-105 Thunderchief]] for a brief period, but returned to the F-100 in [[1964 in aviation|1964]] after only six airshows, following Capt. Gene Devlin's death resulting from structural failure of the aircraft in a high-G climbing maneuver. The F-100 was also judged to be more maneuverable for demonstration displays.
 
Το [[18 Ιανουαρίου]] του [[1982]] τέσσερα αεροσκάφη προσέκρουσαν στο έδαφος με μεγάλη ταχύτητα κατά την διάρκεια δοκιμαστικής πτήσης, εκτελόντας την «περιστροφή διαμαντιού», σκοτώνοντας και τους τέσσερις πιλότους.
[[Image:F-84F Thunderbirds.jpg|thumb|left|The Thunderbirds flew F-84F Thunderstreaks in the 1950s.]]
By [[1967 in aviation|1967]], the Thunderbirds had flown their 1,000th show. In [[1969 in aviation|1969]], the squadron adopted the noisy and huge [[F-4 Phantom II|F-4E Phantom]], which it flew until [[1973 in aviation|1973]], the only time they would fly jets similar to those of the [[Blue Angels]], as it was the standard fighter for both services. A special white paint had to be developed to cover high-temperature metals, replacing the bare metal paint scheme of past planes. The white paint scheme has been continued to the present. Due to the [[1973 oil crisis]], the team was grounded for some time. In 1974 they switched to the more economical [[T-38 Talon]], a supersonic trainer based on the [[F-5 Freedom Fighter|F-5]] fighter. Five T-38s used the same amount of fuel needed for just one F-4 Phantom. The switch to the T-38 also saw an alteration of the flight routine to exhibit the aircraft's maneuverability in tight turns, and also ended the era of the black tail on the #4 slot plane, which would now be regularly cleaned and shined like the others.
 
In [[1982 in aviation|1982]], there was another disaster for the Thunderbirds, occurring during pre-season training on [[January 18]]. While practicing the 4 plane diamond loop, the formation impacted the ground at high speed, instantly killing all four pilots: Major Norm Lowry, leader, Captain Willie Mays, Captain Pete Peterson and Captain Mark Melancon. The cause of the crash was officially listed by the [[United States Air Force|USAF]] as the result of a mechanical problem with the #1 aircraft's control stick actuator. Despite the fact that the accident investigative board had not uncovered any evidence to support this theory, there was heavy pressure from the pilots' families and top Air Force officials to arrive at this conclusion.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} During formation flight, the wing and slot pilots visually cue off of the #1 lead aircraft, completely disregarding their positions in relation to the ground. In this accident, this is the root cause for all four aircraft impacting the terrain, not just the lead jet with the problem.
Το [[1983]] οι Thunderbirds επέστρεψαν στην χρήση μαχητικών με τα [[F-16 Fighting Falcon|General Dynamics F-16A Fighting Falcon]], τα οποία κράτησαν μέχρι το [[1992]], οπότε και παρέλαβαν την αναβαθμησνένη έκδοση F-16C που χρησιμοποιούν μέχρι σήμερα.
Many in the fighter community felt that the cause was most likely a result of the lead pilot's error due to a simple miscalculation, the equivalent of [[controlled flight into terrain]].{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
Το [[1986]] η ομάδα έδωσε μια εντυπωσιακή επίδειξη στην [[Νέα Υόρκη]] μπροστά σε κοινό δεκάδων εκατομυρίων, στη διάρκεια των εορτασμών για τα εκατο χρόνια του [[Άγαλμα της Ελευθερίας|Αγάλματος της Ελευθερίας]]. Το [[1987]] έδωσαν την πρώτη Αμερικανική στρατιωτική επίδειξη σε [[κουμινισμός|κουμουνιστική]] χώρα κατά την επίσκεψή τους στο [[Πεκίνο]]. Το [[1990]] έδωσαν την 3000η τους επίδειξη και το [[1996]] συμμετείχαν στην τελετή έναρξης των Ολυμπιακών Αγώνων της [[Ατλάντα]], όπου τους παρακολούθησαν περίπου 3,5 δισεκατομύρια άνθρωποι σε όλο τον κόσμο. Η ομάδα γιόρτασε την 50η της επέτειο την [[1 Ιουνίου]] [[2003]].
[[Image:Airshowfan-dot-com--by-Bernardo-Malfitano--Image-of-USAF-Thunderbirds-0.jpg|thumb|Thunderbirds F-16s (including three spare aircraft, for a total of nine) precisely lined up on the ramp at Nellis AFB just prior to the team's last performance of 2004.]]
In 1983, the team returned to front-line fighters with the General Dynamics F-16A Fighting Falcon. They would change to the updated F-16C (now [[Lockheed-Martin]]) in 1992, an aircraft which has proven its outstanding effectiveness in both air-to-ground and air superiority competitions.
 
In [[1986 in aviation|1986]], the Thunderbirds did a fly-by for the re-dedication of the [[Statue of Liberty]] in [[New York City]], which was viewed by tens of millions. They also performed the first American military demonstration in a [[Communist]] country when the team visited [[Beijing]], [[China]] in [[1987 in aviation|1987]]. Their 3,000th air show was performed in [[1990 in aviation|1990]]. In [[1996 in aviation|1996]], the team participated in the [[1996 Summer Olympics|Atlanta Olympics']] opening ceremonies, which were viewed by an estimated 3.5 billion people worldwide. The squadron celebrated its 50th anniversary on [[June 1]], [[2003 in aviation|2003]].
 
In June, [[2005 in aviation|2005]] the Thunderbirds accepted Captain [[Nicole Malachowski]] as the squadron's first ever female pilot and in 2006 the first ever female solo pilot, Captain Samantha Weeks, was added to the officer list.
 
Also in [[2005 in aviation|2005]], the Thunderbirds temporarily grounded themselves pending an investigation into a minor mid-air incident during the [[Chicago Air & Water Show]] on [[August 20]]. During a diamond formation slow-roll pass, the tip of the missile rail on the right wing of the slot (#4) aircraft contacted the left [[stabilator]] of the right (#3) aircraft. A four-foot section of the missile rail snapped off, while the #3 aircraft sustained damage described by one of the Thunderbirds pilots as a "medium deep scratch" to the red paint of the stabilator. Amateur video showed the missile rail falling into the "safety box" on [[Lake Michigan]] away from boaters. While there were no injuries and the aircraft remained apparently flightworthy, the demonstration was immediately terminated, all aircraft returned to Gary International Airport, and the Thunderbirds did not return for the second day of the Chicago show. The Right Winger (#3) was Major D. Chris Callahan, and the Slot position (#4) was flown by Major Steve Horton.
 
==Aircraft==
'''Republic F-84G Thunderjet'''
1953-1954
Mindful of their mission to show the Air Force’s best aircraft, the Air Force selected the swept wing F-84F Thunderstreak as their second aircraft in 1955. The Thunderstreak was modified for the team by adding smoke tanks for the first time, and red, white and blue [[drag chutes]].
 
'''Republic F-84F Thunderstreak'''
1954-1956
 
'''North American F-100C Super Sabre'''
1956-1963
The USAF's first operational supersonic aircraft.
With the move from the F-84F to the F-100 Super Sabre in 1956, the Thunderbirds became the world’s first supersonic aerial demonstration team. That same year, the Thunderbirds moved to Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada, simplifying logistics and maintenance for the aircraft.
 
'''Republic F-105B Thunderchief'''
1964
(only 6 shows flown in type) Largest and heaviest single engine fighter ever produced.
 
'''North American F-100D Super Sabre'''
1964-1968
 
'''McDonnell F-4E Phantom II'''
1969-1973
The F-4’s conversion was the most extensive in the team’s history. Among other modifications, paints that had worked on the F-100 made the F-4 look patchy because of multicolored [[alloys]] used in the F-4 to resist heat and [[friction]] at [[Mach number|Mach 2]] speeds. As a result, a [[polyurethane]] paint base was developed and used to cover the problem. The white paint base remains a part of today’s Thunderbird aircraft.
 
'''Northrop T-38 Talon'''
1974-1981
1974 brought with it a fuel crisis and as a result a new aircraft for the team, the sleek, swift and highly maneuverable Northrop T-38A Talon, the Air Force’s first supersonic trainer. Economically, the T-38 was unmatched. Five T-38s used the same amount of fuel needed for one F-4 Phantom, and fewer people and less equipment were required to maintain the aircraft.
 
Although the Talon did not fulfill the Thunderbird tradition of flying front-line jet fighters, it did meet the criteria of demonstrating the capabilities of a prominent Air Force aircraft.
 
'''General Dynamics F-16A/B Fighting Falcon'''
1983-1991
During the switch to the F-16A the Thunderbirds acquired new block 15 aircraft which they operated for about 10 years making the team one of the last USAF units flying the older F-16A's before transitioning into new C's. They also operated the two-seat F-16B during this time for training new pilots and for VIP flights, these being replaced by the F-16D when the rest of the squadron transitioned to the F-16C.
 
'''Lockheed Martin F-16C/D Fighting Falcon'''
1992-Current
The block 32H/J aircraft currently assigned to the Thunderbirds were built in 1986 & 1987 and are some of the oldest operational F-16s in the Air Force. ([[Lockheed Corporation|Lockheed]] purchased the [[General Dynamics]] division which makes the F-16 ([[Fort Worth, TX]]) in 1993.)
 
==Transition to F-16s==
In [[1982 in aviation|1982]] the team switched to the [[F-16 Fighting Falcon|F-16A Fighting Falcon]]; this transition had been under consideration before the "Diamond Crash" in January. The team sat out the 1982 airshow season and spent that year retraining and transiting over into the new aircraft to ready themselves for the 1983 season.
 
The team continues to fly the F-16 today, having switched from the "A" to "C" version in [[1992 in aviation|1992]]. These are nearly identical to current combat aircraft; it takes just a few minor modifications for an F-16C to be made ready for the Thunderbirds. These changes include the replacement of the 20mm cannon and ammunition drum with a smoke-generating system, including its plumbing and control switches, the removal of the jet fuel starter exhaust door, and the application of the Thunderbirds' glossy red, white, and blue polyurethane paint scheme. All of the modification work is performed at the maintenance depot at [[Hill AFB]] near [[Ogden, Utah]]. If necessary, the planes could be made combat-ready in less than 72 hours.
 
[[Image:Airshowfan-dot-com--by-Bernardo-Malfitano--Image-of-USAF-Thunderbirds-3.jpg|thumb|A nerve-tensing opposing pass performed by the USAF Thunderbirds opposing solos.]]
 
== Current Thunderbirds ==
Members of the 2007 season USAF Thunderbird Team:
*Flying Thunderbird No.1 Lt. Col. Kevin Robbins (Commander/Leader)
*Flying Thunderbird No.2 Major Chris Austin (Left Wing)
*Flying Thunderbird No.3 Major [[Nicole Malachowski]] (Right Wing)
*Flying Thunderbird No.4 Major William Poteet (Slot)
*Flying Thunderbird No.5 Major Ed Casey(Lead Solo)
*Flying Thunderbird No.6 Major Samantha Weeks (Opposing Solo)
*Flying Thunderbird No.7 Major Richard Skelton (Operations Officer)
*Flying Thunderbird No.8 Major Tad Clark (Advance Pilot/Narrator)
*Thunderbird No.9 Major Dan Mirski (Flight Surgeon)
*Thunderbird No.10 Capt. Amy Glisson (Executive Officer)
*Thunderbird No.11 Capt. Gifford Ploetz (Maintenance Officer)
*Thunderbird No.12 Capt. Elizabeth Kreft (Public Affairs Officer)
 
== The Routine (The Demo)==
[[Image:ThunderbirdsBombBurst750.jpeg|thumb|left|Thunderbirds performing their signature "bomb burst" maneuver]]
 
From the end of the runway the 4-ship Thunderbird team get ready to begin their take-off roll with the words "Thunderbirds run em up!" being retransmitted from the team leaders mic through the PA system for the anxiously awaiting crowd to hear.
 
Diamond: As Thunderbirds 1 through 4 lift off the slot aircraft slips immediately into position behind 1 to create the signature Diamond formation in the climb passing by the crowd and into a rolling turn at the departure end of the field and set up for their first pass the diamond clover loop.
 
[[Image:usaftbirds.jpg|thumb|right|Thunderbirds in a traditional diamond formation]]
 
Solos: Thunderbird 5 takes to the air next performing a clean low altitude aileron roll followed by 6 who performs a split-s climbing in a near vertical maneuver rolling over and diving back toward show center pulling up just above the runway and exiting in the opposite direction. *Note* Thunderbird 6 has not been executing any opening maneuver yet this 2006 season (This is the maneuver in which the mishap occurred in Idaho in September 2003.).
 
Thunderbird 5's first trick is an inverted pass followed by 6 who does an inverted pass with a 360 aileron roll at show center.
 
Much of the Thunderbirds display alternates between maneuvers performed by the diamond, and those performed by the solos. The diamond performs maneuvers in tight formation such as formation loops and rolls or transitions from one formation to another.
The opposing solos usually perform their maneuvers just under the speed of sound, and show off the capabilities of their individual F-16s by doing maneuver such as fast passes, slow passes, fast rolls, slow rolls, and very tight turns. Some of their maneuvers include both solo F-16s at once, such as opposing passes (where the solos fly towards each other in what appears to be a collision course, and seem to narrowly miss each other) and mirror formations (their two F-16s being flown back-to-back in the calypso pass or belly-to-belly. In such formations, one Thunderbird must of course be inverted, and it is always Thunderbird number 5. In fact, the "5" on this aircraft is painted on upside down, and thus appears right-side-up for much of the routine). At the end of the routine, all six aircraft join in formation, forming the Delta. There is also an extra amount of humor regarding the inverted performance of Thunderbird Five: the pilots all wear tailored flight suits with their name and jet number embroidered on the left breast. The 5 is sewn inverted.
 
One of the Thunderbirds' standing engagements is the annual commencement ceremony at the [[United States Air Force Academy]] in Colorado Springs. The jets fly over [[Falcon Stadium]] at the precise moment the cadets throw their hats into the air at ceremony's end.
 
== Accidents ==
=== Airshows ===
The Thunderbirds have performed at over 4,000 airshows worldwide, accumulating millions of miles in hundreds of different airframes over the course of their 53+ years of service.
 
Flying high performance fighter jets is inherently dangerous; when flying in extremely close formation the danger is compounded. The team has suffered two fatal crashes during air shows.
 
The first was the death of Major Joe Howard flying Thunderbird 3 on [[June 4]] [[1972]] at [[Dulles Airport]], during [[Transpo 72]]. His Phantom (F-4E s/n# 66-0321) experienced a loss of power during a vertical maneuver. Maj Howard ejected as the aircraft fell back to earth from about 1,500 feet tail first and descended under a good canopy, but the winds blew him into the blazing crash site.
 
The second death occurred [[May 9]] [[1981]] at [[Hill AFB]], Utah, when Captain David "Nick" Hauck flying Thunderbird 6 crashed while attempting to land his ailing T-38 after an engine malfunctioned and caught fire. The safety officer on the ground radioed Capt Hauck, "You’re on fire, punch out", to which he responded, “Hang on... we have a bunch of people down there”. The aircraft continued to fight to stay airborne for about ½ a mile before hitting a large oak tree and a barn, then slid across a field and flipped as it traversed an irrigation canal, ultimately erupting into a fireball just a few hundred feet from the runway's end. No one on the ground was injured even though the wreck occurred adjacent to a roadway packed with onlookers.
 
=== Other accidents ===
Eighteen other pilots of the Thunderbirds have perished in jet accidents.
 
*On [[October 9]], [[1958]] 14 men aboard the Thunderbirds support C-123 perished in a crash 50 miles NW of [[Boise, Idaho]] while transiting to an airshow.
 
*[[September 24]], [[1961]] TSgt John Lesso of the Thunderbirds C-123 crew was killed when an Air Force C-123 carrying the [[United States Army Parachute Team|Army Golden Knights]] crashed on take-off at an airshow in Wilmington, NC. He was aboard the aircraft as an observer.
 
*December 13, [[1954]]: Capt. George Kevil is killed during solo training at Luke.
 
*[[September 26]], 1957: Lt. Bob Rutte is killed in solo training at Nellis.
 
*[[March 12]], 1959: Capt. C.D. Salmon is killed in solo training at Nellis.
 
*[[July 27]], [[1960]]: Capt. J.R. Crane, advance pilot and narrator for the team, is killed during a solo proficiency flight at Nellis.
 
==Αεροσκάφη==
*[[April 6]], [[1961]]: Maj. Robert Fitzgerald, commander and group leader of the team, and Capt. George Nial, advance pilot and narrator, are killed during training at Nellis.
 
*'''Republic F-84G Thunderjet:''' 1953 - 1954
*[[May 9]], [[1964]]: Capt. Eugene J. Devlin is killed when his F-105 breaks in two as it enters the vertical while in a 3 plane formation following a low pass over Hamilton Air Force Base, California.<ref>[http://www.check-six.com/Crash_Sites/Thunderbirds_F-105_crash_site.htm Check-Six.com - The Crash of the Thunderbirds' F-105B]</ref>
 
*'''Republic F-84F Thunderstreak:''' 1954 - 1956
*[[October 12]], [[1966]]: Maj. Frank Leithen and Capt. Robert Morgan are killed during a flight at Indian Springs Auxiliary Field in [[Nevada]].
 
*'''North American F-100C Super Sabre:''' 1956 - 1963
*[[January 9]], [[1969]]: Capt. Jack Thurman is killed in solo training at Nellis.
 
*'''Republic F-105B Thunderchief:''' 1964 (μόνο για έξι επιδείξεις)
*[[December 21]], [[1972]]: Capt. Jerry Bolt and Tech Sgt. Chuck Lynn are killed during a flight test at Nellis.
 
*'''North American F-100D Super Sabre:''' 1964 - 1968
*[[July 25]], [[1977]]: Capt. Charlie Carter, Thunderbird pilot and narrator, is fatally injured during maneuvers at F.E. Warren Air Force Base in Wyoming.
 
*'''McDonnell F-4E Phantom II:''' 1969 - 1973
*[[May 9]], [[1981]]: Capt. Nick Hauck is killed in the crash of his No. 6 T-38 during a low approach at Hill AFB, Utah, impacting south of the runway.
 
*'''Northrop T-38 Talon:''' 1974 - 1981
*[[September 8]], [[1981]]: Lt. Col. D.L. Smith, commander of the Thunderbirds, is killed when his aircraft ingests seagulls and stalls while leaving Cleveland. Smith crashed into [[Lake Erie]] without attempting to eject.
 
*'''General Dynamics F-16A/B Fighting Falcon:''' 1983 - 1991
*[[January 18]], [[1982]]: The "Diamond Crash" becomes the worst training crash in Thunderbird history. Maj. Norm Lowry, Capt. Willie Mays, Capt. Pete Peterson and Capt. Mark Melancon are killed while flying the famous diamond formation during training at Indian Springs. The crash resulted from insufficient back pressure on the T-38 control stick during the loop. This major crash with associated fatalities led to the Thunderbirds getting the [[F-16 Fighting Falcon]] as a replacement aircraft. In order to rebuild the Thunderbird Team, the Air Force reached back to previous Thunderbird pilots still on active duty to "come out of air show retirement", qualified each in the F-16A, and had them begin flying "two-ship" through all the maneuvers, and expanded &mdash; one airplane at a time &mdash; up to the full six airplanes. The "new" F-16 Thunderbirds were led by Major Jim Latham.
 
*'''Lockheed Martin F-16C/D Fighting Falcon:''' 1992 - Παρόν
*[[September 14]], [[2003]]: 31-year-old Captain Chris Stricklin, flying Thunderbird #6 (opposing solo) failed to pull out of a dive but safely ejected at [[Mountain Home Air Force Base|Mountain Home AFB]] in southwest [[Idaho]]. Stricklin miscalculated the altitude required to complete his opening maneuver, a "[[Split S]]". The elevation of the airfield was about 1100 feet higher than the team's home base at [[Nellis Air Force Base|Nellis AFB]]. He climbed to an inadequate altitude of just 1670 feet [[above ground level]], instead of 2500 feet, before initiating the pull-down dive of the [[Split S]] maneuver. Stricklin ejected when the rapidly descending [[F-16|F-16C]] was only 140 feet above ground - just 0.8 seconds prior to impact. His parachute deployed just above the ground and he sustained only minor injuries from the ejection. There were no injuries to any personnel or spectators on the ground.<ref>
The cockpit video of the ejection is in the External Links section below, and a picture is available [[:Image:Crash.arp.600pix.jpg|here]].</ref>
 
==Εξωτερικοί Σύνδεσμοι==
== Lineage ==
Organized as 30th Aero Squadron on 13 Jun 1917. Demobilized on 14 April 1919. Reconstituted, and redesignated 30th Bombardment Squadron, on 24 Mar 1923. Activated on 24 Jun 1932. Redesignated: 30th Bombardment Squadron (Heavy) on 6 December 1939; 30th Bombardment Squadron, Very Heavy, on 28 Mar 1944. Inactivated on 1 April 1944. Activated on 1 April 1944. Redesignated: 30th Bombardment Squadron, Medium, on 10 August 1948; 30th Bombardment Squadron, Heavy, on 1 July 1961. Discontinued, and inactivated, on 1 February 1963. Consolidated (19 September 1985) with unit constituted as USAF Air Demonstration Squadron, and activated, on 13 February 1967. Organized on 25 February 1967.
 
*[http://thunderbirds.airforce.com/ Η επίσημη ιστοσελίδα των Thunderbirds]
==Relationship to Other USAF Aerial Demonstration Teams==
*[http://www.air-and-space.com/20031024%20Edwards%20Thunderbirds.htm Σελίδα αφιερωμένη στους Thunderbirds]
*[http://www.planepictures.net/netsearch4.cgi?srch=Thunderbirds&stype=airline&srng=2 Οι Thunderbirds στο planepictures.net]
*[http://www.airliners.net/search/photo.search?front=yes&s=1&keywords=Thunderbirds Οι Thunderbirds στο airliners.net]
*[http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=USAF+Thunderbirds&search=Search Οι Thunderbirds στο you tube]
 
The first USAF jet-powered aerobatic demo team was the "[[Acrojets]]", performing early in 1949 with [[P-80 Shooting Star|F-80]]Cs at the USAF Fighter School at [[Williams Air Force Base]], [[Arizona]], and was headed by Col. Howard W. "Suede" Jensen. This team flew together until August 1950, when it was deactivated due to the American commitment to the [[Korean War]]. Additionally, there was also a later [[USAFE]] "Acrojets" team in [[Germany]], this one made up of USAF [[T-33]] instructor pilots at [[Fürstenfeldbruck AB]] in the mid-1950s.
 
The "[[Skyblazers]]" were the USAF demonstration team representing the [[United States Air Forces Europe]] (USAFE) from the late 1940s through the 1950s. This team was formed in early 1949 by a group of [[22d Fighter Squadron]] pilots from the [[36th Fighter Wing]] at [[Fürstenfeldbruck AB]] in [[Germany]]. At this time they were flying Lockheed [[F-80]]B "Shooting Stars." The unit transitioned to the [[F-84 Thunderjet|F-84]]E in 1950, the [[F-86 Sabre|F-86]]F in 1955 and the [[F-100 Super Sabre|F-100]]C in 1956. Unlike the Thunderbirds, the Skyblazers seldom appeared outside of the realm of USAFE operations in Europe.
 
The Skyblazers were disbanded in January 1962 when their home squadron was rotated back to the United States and their assigned aircraft transitioned to the [[F-105 Thunderchief]].
 
:''Το άρθρο είναι βασισμένο στο [[:en:U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds|αντίστοιχο άρθρο]] της Αγγλικής [[:en:Wikipedia | Wikipedia]].''
 
 
== Image Gallery ==
<gallery>
Image:Usaf.thunder.750pix.jpg|USAF Thunderbirds flying the F-16
Image:Airshowfan-dot-com--by-Bernardo-Malfitano--Image-of-USAF-Thunderbirds-1.jpg|The USAF Thunderbirds form up into the Delta near the end of an airshow.
Image:Airshowfan-dot-com--by-Bernardo-Malfitano--Image-of-USAF-Thunderbirds-2.jpg|The USAF Thunderbirds start their routine at [[Moffett Federal Airfield|Moffett Field's]] 2004 airshow the way they start every routine - with a sneak pass, overhead from behind.
Image:Airshowfan-dot-com--by-Bernardo-Malfitano--Image-of-USAF-Thunderbirds-4.jpg|The USAF Thunderbirds opposing solos fly two mirror formations.
Image:Airshowfan-dot-com--by-Bernardo-Malfitano--Image-of-USAF-Thunderbirds-5.jpg|A USAF Thunderbird taxis out just before the demo at [[Edwards Air Force Base|Edwards AFB's]] 2003 airshow.
Image:Airshowfan-dot-com--by-Bernardo-Malfitano--Image-of-USAF-Thunderbirds-6.jpg|A USAF Thunderbird performs a sneak pass at high speed and full afterburner at the Nellis airshow, 2004.
Image:Airshowfan-dot-com--by-Bernardo-Malfitano--Image-of-USAF-Thunderbirds-7.jpg|The USAF Thunderbirds diamond performs a loop while in tight formation, at the [[Nellis Air Force Base|Nellis AFB]] 2004 airshow.
Image:USAF memorial.jpg|Thunderbirds over the new [[United States Air Force Memorial]] in [[Arlington, VA]].
Image:ThunderbirdsLangley 2007002.jpg|Thunderbirds in close formation, Langley AFB, April 2007
Image:Airshow2007052pano.jpg|Thunderbirds fuel-up, Langley AFB, April 2007
</gallery>
 
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
 
== External links ==
{{portalpar|Military of the United States|Naval Jack of the United States.svg|65}}
* [http://thunderbirds.airforce.com/ Thunderbirds' official website]
* [http://members.aol.com/_ht_a/afskiers/skyblazers.htm Skyblazers history page]
* [http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=1461 USAF Museum link for USAF aerial demonstration teams]
* [http://www.jjetspress.com/pub1.html Fighter mechanic details Thunderbirds tryout in book]
* [http://www.f-16.net/news_article968.html F-16.net] Idaho ejection video of 14-Sep-2003
* [http://www.usafthunderbirds.com USAFThunderbirds.com] Thunderbirds' Airshow Schedule, FAQ's, Pictures
 
{{Αεροπορικά Ακροβατικά Σμήνη}}
{{Modern aerobatic teams}}
 
[[Category:Military units and formations of the United States Air Force]]
[[Category:United States Air Force Thunderbirds pilots|*]]
[[Category:Military in Nevada]]
[[Category:Visitor attractions in Las Vegas]]
 
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