Whilst this is all very interesting what I'm sure we all want to know is, what's Fozzer doing in a blooming Lightning???
Low and slow my XXXX.
Zaphod ;D ;D
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What got me interested in this EE Lightning malarkey, was a program on BBC 2 last night...>>>
More info:....Professor Brian Cox uses one of the South African Lightnings (XS451) in his "Wonders of the Solar System" BBC TV programme - episode 3 of 5, "The Thin Blue Line". The broadcast features a "vertical" ascent, and allows the Professor to show the curvature of the Earth and the relative dimensions of the atmosphere. More than five minutes of the episode are devoted to the Lightning, with a large number of close-ups. Coincidentally, this was the aircraft that crashed only about a month later at the Overberg Airshow, after developing mechanical problems.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0 ... Blue_Line/
I was puzzled by the fact that the Prof Brian Cox is seen sat in the cockpit of the EE Lightning, and travelling very quickly vertically into space, and me thinking that the Lightning was a single-seater fighter, and doubting that the Prof held an Aeroplane Driving Licence, to boot!
A subsequent Wikie search revealed that there is a rare trainer model fitted with 2 seats, side by side, (which is cosy), and it was a proper pilot which took him skywards!
It illustrated the great speed which the Lightning can continuously travel vertically, a feat which my little Cessna 150 fails miserably...

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The Lightening is certainly my aeroplane of choice to travel between San Francisco and Los Angeles at a speed which my Cessna 150 can only dream of, and never see the curvature of the Earth!...

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Paul...just call me "5G's Fozz".... 8-)...!
Win 8.1 64-bit. DX11. Advent Tower. Intel i7-3770 3.9 GHz 8-core. 8 GB System RAM. AMD Radeon HD 7700 1GB RAM. DVD ROM. 2 Terra Byte SATA Hard Drive. Philips 17" LCD Monitor. Saitek Cyborg X Fly-5 Joystick. ...and a Briggs and Stratton Petrol Lawn Mower.