Flat-top, hot drop: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{wip}} {{stub}} '''Flat-top, hot drop''' is euphemism for an unannounced landing of allied planes on Navy of Burgundie aircraft carriers, and vice versa. It was first recorded during Operation Kipling when a Burgoignesc fighter was running out of fuel and needed to make a landing on an Urceann carrier. In modern times it has become a semi-formalized readiness training tool when large, friendly navies are operating within close proximity of eac...")
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In modern times it has become a semi-formalized readiness training tool when large, friendly navies are operating within close proximity of each other. The [[Navy of Burgundie]]'s various fleet commands will now host flat-top, hot drop events to give their deck crews and pilots training with other navies.
In modern times it has become a semi-formalized readiness training tool when large, friendly navies are operating within close proximity of each other. The [[Navy of Burgundie]]'s various fleet commands will now host flat-top, hot drop events to give their deck crews and pilots training with other navies.
 
<gallery mode="packed">
 
File:US Navy 100604-N-2844S-096 A French navy Rafale F-3 fighter aircraft lands aboard the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman (CVN 75).jpg
Categories to follow.
File:971223-N-0507F-001 An F-A-18 Hornet makes an arrested landing aboard the aircraft carrier USS George Washington (CVN 73).jpg
File:US Navy 100830-N-6720T-152 Landing signal officers direct An F-A-18 Hornet to a landing aboard the aircraft carrier USS George Washington (CVN 73).jpg
File:Italian Lockheed Martin F-35B landing on the aircraft carrier Cavour (550) off the coast of Civitavecchia.jpg
File:US Navy 090602-N-7656T-105 An EA-6B Prowler assigned to Electronic Attack Squadron (VAQ) 129 makes an arrested landing aboard the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) during flight operations off the coast of Virginia.jpg
File:US Navy 040619-N-5549O-049 A Landing Signalman Enlisted (LSE) aboard the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76).jpg
File:US Navy 040617-N-9319H-762 An Argentine Navy Dassault Super Etendard jet aircraft comes in for a "touch and go" landing on the flight deck of the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76).jpg
File:US Navy 070723-N-0916O-118 A French Rafale M combat aircraft from the French nuclear-powered aircraft carrier Charles De Gaulle lands on the flight deck of the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Enterprise (CVN 65).jpg
</gallery>

Latest revision as of 02:08, 10 February 2024

Flat-top, hot drop is euphemism for an unannounced landing of allied planes on Navy of Burgundie aircraft carriers, and vice versa. It was first recorded during Operation Kipling when a Burgoignesc fighter was running out of fuel and needed to make a landing on an Urceann carrier.

In modern times it has become a semi-formalized readiness training tool when large, friendly navies are operating within close proximity of each other. The Navy of Burgundie's various fleet commands will now host flat-top, hot drop events to give their deck crews and pilots training with other navies.