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  • Oh boy.

  • Back in the dawn of aviation, in the 1920s,

  • wing-walking was an incredibly dangerous stunt.

  • Daredevils would get out of the seat in their plane

  • and just clamber around the wings

  • with nothing but their own strength.

  • Maybe there'd be a pole at the top

  • they could attach to once they were up there,

  • but mostly it was just them and their strength

  • against 100mph wind.

  • Now there are still a very small number of folks in the world

  • who do wing-walking that way,

  • but in the 21st century,

  • wing-walking is a little bit different.

  • Hahaha!

  • Oh, yes!

  • Oh, wow.

  • - We go at roughly from 80 to 160mph. Various, in between that.

  • And we'll pull up to 4g, so it's a huge strain on our bodies

  • and we're doing manoeuvres, so we'll lift our legs up,

  • we can do handstands and we'll also move around.

  • It's like resistance training, it's really hard work.

  • In the loop, we'll get to about 4g at the bottom

  • and then as soon as we go over the top

  • we start waving, cause that's the nice weightless bit,

  • so it's easier to start then, than start when you're going really quickly.

  • You have about a month of intense training.

  • You practise everything on the ground first

  • and then you just go up in the air and do it repetitively.

  • You fly everyday, all day, so it's absolutely knackering.

  • - At Eastbourne Airshow, we take off

  • from an airfield near Brighton and we fly along the coast

  • for 20 minutes and then they climb up onto the wing,

  • so they climb up in flight.

  • On the transit flight, the procedure for them to climb onto the wing

  • is for them to unstrap their main seat harness, but at all times

  • they have a carabiner which slides up and down the wire.

  • Their cable is about 60cm long,

  • so they can never be more than 60cm away from the centre line of the aircraft.

  • Once they get up onto the wing,

  • the carabiner is then behind them, still attached,

  • and then they strap themselves into the five point harness,

  • which is on the swivel rig on the wing

  • and at that point, of course, then they have two methods of attachment.

  • That's totally different to the 1920s!

  • Woo-hoo!

  • Woo-hoo-hoo!

  • - The main difference when having someone on the wing

  • is that there is a significant amount of drag from that person.

  • It's a bit like flying an aircraft with your gear and flaps down.

  • You'll need more power to fly and you need to check the trim as well,

  • because the people on the wing provide a forward centre of gravity.

  • - So at the end of the show, we'll chat to everyone

  • and they'll tell us what they enjoyed.

  • Usually, it's when we do the rolls and we go upside down

  • because they can't quite believe that we're strapped on.

  • From the air, you can't see our wire.

  • It's all a bit of an illusion, so it looks like we're not attached,

  • and they're like, "Oh my gosh!"

  • So it's a bit of a daredevil thing they think is going on as well.

  • - Kids come up to us all the time,

  • especially young girls that are doing gymnastics and think,

  • 'oh my gosh, that's incredible',

  • so it's really nice to feel like you're a bit of a role model for people.

  • - That is exhausting.

  • That is one of the most physically strenuous things

  • I think I've ever done.

  • Whoo!

  • Hahaha!

Oh boy.

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B1 中級

詠遊不再是以前的樣子,這是一件好事。 (Wingwalking Isn't What It Used To Be, And That's A Good Thing)

  • 2 0
    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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