Aero GP

Aero GP is an international air racing series with up to eight specially designed high-performance sports planes all racing together at speeds of up to 400 km/h (250 mph) around a tight circuit just metres off the ground and from each other.[1] The competing pilots are military and civilian pilots from around the world. Aero GP is the only international, televised event where aeroplanes race simultaneously. Aero GP officially started in 2005 in Slovenia. From there it has travelled to several countries in Europe and Middle East. Instead of the checked flag pattern, Aero GP judges its participants on the basis on points won in individual events and hence, there is no clear winner till the end.

Aero GP
GenreAir Racing, Air Combat and Barnstorming air show
Venue
  • Al Ain Aerobatic Show - January 30, 2010
  • Al Ain Aerobatic Show - January 30, 2009
  • Blackpool - June 29, 2008
  • Mamaia Beach, Constanta - June 8, 2008
  • Constanta - August 25, 2007
  • Malta - September 10, 2006
  • Slovenia - May 22, 2005
Organised byFlying Aces Ltd.
Websitehttp://aero-gp.com

Competitive elements

Three primary disciplines in series decide the annual World Champion Flying Ace:

Air Racing: All racing at the same time, between six and eight aircraft reach speeds of 500 km/h at just 10 metres above the racecourse.

Air Combat: A real air-to-air “dogfight”. Pilots take to the skies in an attempt to outmanoeuvre, hunt down and shoot each other out of the sky, in the style of military air combat.

Barnstorming: A third element which can consist of any of the following - depending on the venue: aerobatics, stunt flying or precision target dropping - pilots drop bombs from their aircraft at low altitude, aiming at various targets.

History

The first Aero GP was held in 2005 although the concept dates to 2000. The inaugural event, held in Slovenia, was televised in over 100 countries. Since then Aero GP's have been held in Malta, Romania (twice), The United Kingdom, and Abu Dhabi in the UAE.

The Pilots

Aero GP pilots have backgrounds in flying a range of military and aerobatic aircraft. They come from a variety of countries and backgrounds. Fighter pilots, aerobatics champions, and civil aviation pilots are all known to compete. They are put through tremendous amounts of G-Force when performing in their aircraft.

Regular Aero GP Pilots

Andy Bickmore
Zoltan Veres
"Smokey" Young
Gerry Cooper
Mark Jefferies

2008 series

The series consisted of two Aero GP's. June saw the Aero GP team return to Constanta in Romania and this was followed by a second round in Blackpool, UK.

2009 series

The 2009 series sees Aero GP visit the Middle East for the first time. Aero GP will be headlining the Al Ain air show in the United Arab Emirates between January 29–31. There are multiple other venues being discussed for 2009 and these will be announced in the new year.[2]

Accidents

During the Malta show on 10 September 2006, two planes, an Extra EA-200 and a Yakovlev Yak-55, collided just outside Marsamxett Harbour off Valletta. The Swedish pilot of the Yak-55, aerobatics champion Gabor Varga, died instantly. However, the Irish Extra 200 pilot, Eddie Goggins, suffered only minor injuries and was soon released after the crash.[3][4][5]

gollark: Probably the blast with microwaves approach unless you can wirelessly hijack them too.
gollark: It would probably be more efficient to try and down drones by mucking with their communications more subtly than blasting them with microwaves.
gollark: Yes, obey your robot overlords.
gollark: There isn't one. Unicode only defines "gun" as far as I know, and people randomly started displaying it as a water gun.
gollark: If you're not careful, you CAN accidentally accelerate to extremely high relativistic speeds such that you experience massive time dilation.

References

Further reading

  1. Formula 1 air race coming to Mumbai - Times Of India - IANS - Aug 3, 2011
  2. The Independent UK, Everything you need to know about... Aero GP,By Amol Rajan, Monday 26 January 2009
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.