The awesome RAF Chinook Display wonderfully introduced by my friend Flt Lt Paul Huyton and spectacularly opens the display with The Blades, who are a world class aerobatics team.
Wokka and the Blade Slap are unique terms used to describe the Chinook. It does have a distinctive sound and you can tell it apart from other helicopters just by its sound.
The RAF Chinook Display Team, based at RAF Odiham in Hampshire, aims to demonstrate the RAF Chinook’s capability. As well as part of the RAF Chinook Display Team, the crew are also part of a fully operational Squadron where they combine their daily training demands with practising their display sequence.
ROLE
The Chinook is an extremely capable and highly versatile support helicopter that can be operated from land bases or seaborne vessels into a range of diverse environments, from the Arctic to the desert or jungle. The aircraft may be heavily armed and is fitted with a suite of self-defence equipment allowing it to operate across highly contested battlespace. Chinooks are primarily used for trooping, resupply and battlefield casualty evacuation (casevac) but the crews are trained to accomplish these tasks under threat from both ground and air based enemies.
With its triple-hook external load system, internal cargo winch, roller conveyor fit and large reserves of power, the aircraft can lift a wide variety of complex underslung or internal freight, including vehicles. It can carry up to 55 troops or up to approximately 10 tonnes of mixed cargo.
Its secondary roles include search and rescue (SAR), and supporting a wide variety of specialist tasks, including the National Resilience commitment. A Chinook crew traditionally comprises two pilots and two crewmen, supplemented by specialists dependent upon mission requirements.
CAPABILITY
In addition to its traditional war fighting roles, the Chinook’s lifting capability is held at readiness under the National Resilience commitment to respond to emergencies in the UK; in recent years these have included resupplying snowbound farmers in Northern Ireland and moving tons of aggregate to help reconstruct flood defences damaged by winter storms.
The current operational Chinook fleet is completing a period of transition into the digital era. Several new-build aircraft have arrived at Mk 6 standard, incorporating both glass cockpit avionics and benefiting from a Digital Automatic Flight Control System (DAFCS, pronounced ‘daffics’), which greatly enhances handling and safety, particularly when operating in recirculating dust or snow conditions. Such a leap forward in capability has also enhanced the older Mk 4 aircraft, which have also seen the embodiment of the same systems to establish them as Mk 6As in service. The RAF fleet also incorporates extended-range ‘fat tank’ aircraft, which carry double the fuel load of a standard Chinook. The cockpit and DAFCS upgrades have turned these airframes from what were Mk 3s into the new Chinook Mk 5. The type will continue to play a key role in UK Defence activity, with the Chinook Sustainment Programme aiming to build on the platform’s success; recapitalising existing airframes and extending the capability out to 2040.
#wokka #bladeslap #chinook
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😮😮😮🔥🔥🔥😎😎😎Awsome 3 days xxx ❤️❤️❤️🧸🧸🧸
Total fave everyday!! Thanks TCS!
Awesome 😎 clip of a fantastic display by the Odiham crew.
still laughing re Teds Wokka manoeuvre 😅
Bring on the #bladeslap 🚁
Great display, actually made my stomach feel a bit funny 😂😂🤮
Love the wokka wokka, best mem I have with them is doin hot (engine running) night time refuelling, even behind a 7500Gall fuel bowser one of these goin up by the side of you is a bit of fun.
wow Ted really did it this time you are one of those people that strikes lucky each time well done 👏 ohhh yeahhh loved the chopping of the blades (get it blades team and blades on the chinook) one of these picked up borris at Gloucestershire I unfortunately saw him 🤣 but anyway oiiii oiii well done. 👏
Oi oi!!! Looks like Ted had a great weekend hobnobbing with RAF display pilots!!! This display got my second vote (glad to see Paddy's dusk display was a worthy winner BTW) because I don't think I've ever seen a display where fixed and rotary wing aircraft fly together in formation which is a novel idea. Full marks to the crew for chucking a large helicopter about and to the fella at the back with the big red hands!! As for the wokka wokka maneuver Ted……I knew it wouldn't end well for the beret!! Great video guys….. ohhhh yeahhhhhh!!!!
fantastic video Ted and nikos 😀 🤙 👍
Hi Ted , hope they got their seat-belts on in that Chinook ! 4:55………and give 'em a BIG HAND ! ooooooooooh nooooooh ………………………………………..
I thought this display was absaloutley brilliant 👏
Interesting to watch as I bought a Chinook a few weeks ago and I am still getting used to flying it.
Thought that Chinook was going to do a loop!
Hasta mañana a dormir cuídense bendiciones