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The Fulton system in use The Fulton system in use from below. The Fulton surface-to-air recovery system (STARS), also known as Skyhook, is a system used by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), United States Air Force, and United States Navy for retrieving individuals on the ground using aircraft such as the MC-130E Combat Talon I and B-17 Flying Fortress.
The problem was how to get to NP 9. It was far too deep into the ice pack to be reached by an icebreaker, and it was out of helicopter range. To Captain John Cadwalader, who would command Operation Coldfeet, it looked like "a wonderful opportunity" [This quote needs a citation] to make use of the Fulton surface-to-air recovery system. Following ...
Fulton surface-to-air recovery system, nicknamed Skyhook, a retrieval method by which a flying aircraft picks up a payload; a system used to launch and recover parasite planes from airships; see Curtiss F9C Sparrowhawk
On 26 April 1982, during the Flintlock 82 exercise, Sergeant First Class Clifford Strickland was picked up by a Lockheed MC-130 Combat Talon of the 7th Special Operations Squadron at CFB Lahr, Germany, using the Fulton surface-to-air recovery system. However, he fell to his death reportedly due to faulty equipment in 1400 hrs accident.
It is these hooks that provided the clue to the covert task of these aircraft because they were the most visible element of the Fulton surface-to-air recovery system invented at the beginning of the 1960s and originally intended for fast and safe recovery of downed pilots from the ground or the sea as well as for the recovery of reconnaissance ...
Bust of Luis de Florez at the Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division in Orlando, Florida. Luis de Florez was from New York City. De Florez attended MIT, and graduated in 1911 with a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering. [3] He wrote his thesis on the subject of an aircraft problem, titled "Thrust of Propellers in Flight."
The Special Patrol Insertion/Extraction (SPIE) system was developed as a means to rapidly insert and/or extract a reconnaissance patrol from an area that does not permit a helicopter to land. SPIE has application for rough terrain as well as water inserts/extracts.
Surface-to-air can refer to: Surface to Air, fashion apparel; Surface to Air Studio, creative agency; Surface-to-air missile or Surface-to-air artillery; Fulton surface-to-air recovery system; Surface to Air, a 2006 rock album by Zombi