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Jeez! What took him so long! It was interesting that at about 1:50 in the video the deck remained level and relatively at the same height for quite a time, when he landed. I cannot imagine he could have safely landed earlier when the deck was heaving and at up to 30 degrees or so. He would have slid off. And after landing why didn't he slide off when the next heave came? I didn't see crew running to tie him down.
Hi Steve, there is a round grid set into the deck with rounded hexagonal apertures that the harpoon captures. It's hydraulicly operated & can open & release prior to take off or close and lock prior to shut down. Navy Lynx have castored rear wheels and swivelling front wheels that, if you wanted to you could turn around 360 degrees... This is so the helo can take off into wind should the ship for some reason not be able to head into wind.
This is the harpoon in action, although I can't remember all the wires and gubbins attached
Very interesting, and clever. Thanks. Still, he had to land in just the correct place, in those conditions!
I was in the Navy yonks ago but kept my feet firmly on the deck. I really could not go through a landing like that. The (slight) risk of being bombed or torpedoed—that's OK, but I need to have more control over what I am doing.
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