Donald J. Trump
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
You're not flying to San Diego.
So this is a great shot.
Next, we will witness the two M35C Lightning II Aircraft perform basic fighter maneuvers commonly referred to as dogfighting.
This is a tactic that has roots tracing back to the daring pilots of World War I.
Each pilot will push their bodies and their aircraft to the extreme limits in order to achieve victory.
Approaching from the bow and the stern, the fighters close in on each other at speeds exceeding 1,000 knots, beginning the fight on neutral terms to determine the winner.
The aircraft will fly past each other in a high-aspect pass with just 500 feet separating them.
There's a commander in chief right there with the First Lady.
Getting a briefing, I think it's the strike force.
I think it's a strike force commander there.
Maybe sunny is that this is that the chief of naval operations with him or is that the strike force commander?
I know I can't see clearly, but I'm I'm almost certain that Admiral Cottle is there as well.
After the merge, each fighter will look to max perform their aircraft by pulling to the load limit of the aircraft at 7.5 Gs.
As they raid around and approach the next merge, each fighter is looking to cue and employ both the AIM-120 and AIM-9X missiles to take out their adversary and win the fight.
The fighters are now approaching the second neutral merge.
One aircraft has decided to execute a nose-high maneuver and gain a positional advantage.
Preparing to employ the AIM-120 to kill their adversary, they will open their weapons bay doors, and the fighter that has a positional advantage will max reform to get them behind their adversary and maintain the offensive position.
After employing both the AIM-120 and the AIM-9X, the offensive fighter will not maneuver to execute a gain attack on their adversary in an attempt to gain a 1v1 engagement victory.
Paul Morgan, tell the audience, what would 7Gs feel like?
Well, as a helicopter pilot, it would be bad.