Badass Pilot Buys Own Fighter Jet - YouTube

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I’ve loved flying from the very first time I had the chance to climb
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into a military airplane. I knew right then and there that's all I wanted to do
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for the rest of my life. It was extremely addictive.
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I had the great fortune in the Marine Corps to fly Harriers.
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It was not my first choice. I wanted to fly fighters, and the Harrier had
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a very bad reputation at the time, but that's what I was assigned to do.
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And after my first flight in a two-seater, I was hooked. It was just amazing
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what the airplane could do, compared to the other airplanes
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I had been flying, which was the A-4.
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[♪ music ♫]
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For me the Harrier symbolizes an iconic Marine Corps airplane.
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It's flown by a couple other countries, but the Marines recognized
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the potential of this airplane back in the early ’70s.
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It was the first foreign-built airplane in U.S. military inventory
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since World War I. Our whole focus is on supporting that 19-year-old
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rifleman on the ground and whatever he needs. That's the center
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of the Marine Corps universe, is the infantry. Everything else is support.
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After about three or four years in the squadron and making deployments
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all over the world, I was selected to be the single Marine to attend
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the U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School. You name it, I flew it.
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I retired from the military and became a real estate investor-slash-developer,
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and I happened to hit it at the right time. I worked hard, I'm not denying that,
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and I built up a pretty good company, but I realized that my real passion
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was not unstopping toilets. That's not what drives me.
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I went to an air show. I saw the airplanes and I got the bug
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again. I had all these quals in the Marine Corps.
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What would it take me to be a civilian pilot?
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I started doing some investigation and I found that I could
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in fact get qual’d [qualified] to fly these airplanes. And I ended up buying
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a Russian Yak-3. It's kind of like a P-51 Mustang. It's a little bit smaller
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than the P-51 with a little bit bigger engine, very, very hot World War II
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fighter. Because of that Russian star on there, and a beginner
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in the air show business, I had a tough time giving that airplane away
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at the air shows. I would go to an air show just for a tankful of fuel,
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just to have fun, just to get the experience, just to build the résumé.
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That's not unusual: A lot of people do that. But I saw that the real
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star of the air show was the Harrier. The audience reacts
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differently to the Harrier than it does to any other act. Differently to the
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Blue Angels, differently to the Thunderbirds. People just absolutely
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stop what they're doing and they look at the airplane.
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I never knew what I was gonna be doing at 61 years old,
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but it certainly didn't include flying a Harrier at air shows.
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Harrier Jump Jets have flown in active service for the last time.
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After almost 40 years of service they've been scrapped as part of the
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coalition spending cuts.
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I read an article that the Brits were surplusing their C Harriers.
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I thought, this is our opportunity to get one.
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I had some feelers out. On a Monday morning I opened up my email.
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It says, “Hey, we found one. It's complete, it's intact, it looks like it just
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flew in the other day. There's another bidder for it. If you’re interested
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you’d better get your money together and get over here.”
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Before I actually bought the airplane, I called the FAA up. I said,
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“What’s it take to get qualified in a unique, one-of-a-kind
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jet airplane?” He says, “What is it?" I said, “Well, it's a Harrier.”
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And he starts laughing. And he goes, "OK, what's your background?"
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And I told him, "Well, I was in the Marine Corps, I’ve got about 400 carrier
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landings. I was a test pilot, I did B-52s, C-141s, F-15s, F-16s, A-7s.”
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And he goes, "OK. Hey, you're the right guy. I'm gonna let you fly
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the airplane. But I’ll tell you right now, you're operating a very hot airplane
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in close proximity to Washington, D.C. We're gonna be watching you like a
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hawk. And I've got no problems at all, if you're hot-rodding around
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the country and breaking some of the regulations, I'll shut you down."
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And I said, "I understand loud and clear."
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Went over to England. It was in a big hangar,
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an abandoned military base, and walk in and there's
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this Harrier with one light bulb hanging right over top of it.
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Gosh, it's gorgeous. It's beautiful. I said, there's no reason why this
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airplane can't fly. The FAA is gonna let me do it.
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So we worked the deal, wrote a one-page contract in Sharpie
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because we only had one piece of paper and we only had a Sharpie.
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We shook hands on it. I went back to the hotel and
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this all took, this was four hours. I can't believe I just bought a Harrier.
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Now the real hard work starts.
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We've had our share of critics. There were a lot of people that thought
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this would never happen. A very few people said it to my face.
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And it didn't matter what they thought anyway, it only mattered what
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we thought, and we knew we could do this.
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There's only one time since getting the airplane, getting it over here,
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putting it together, one time that I had the least little bit of doubt
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as to if this is what we want to do, and that's just prior to the
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first flight. I hadn't flown a Harrier in over 18 years —
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an entire Marine Corps career in some instances.
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We're on a short runway, it's only 4,100 feet.
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So I've got limited options. Once I push the throttle in the corner
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and once I accelerate past 100, 120 knots, I've got to go flying.
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It's kind of like the launch of the space shuttle:
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Once the solids go, you're gone.
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This is the first time that anybody had ever flown an airplane
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with this kind of performance in the civilian world,
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and I knew that the issue was not gonna be whether the airplane
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was gonna fly, the issue was gonna be: Am I able to fly it?
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Are my reflexes still good enough? Or is my eyesight still good enough?
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What is gonna happen when I jam this throttle into the corner?
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Do I really wanna do this?
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This is the point of no return, and in that 10 seconds, I realized:
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I've spent multiple hours in this cockpit. I know this airplane.
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I know where every switch is. I can find them blindfolded.
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I know what it's gonna do when I put the nozzles down.
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I know what it's gonna do when I put the throttle in the corner.
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I know how it brakes. I know how to fly this airplane.
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So 3, 2, 1, I slammed the throttle, the airplane jumped ahead,
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and 3 or 4 seconds later I'm doing a hundred miles an hour
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and I'm airborne.
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I was euphoric. There is no way I could have done this by myself.
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It's just like the military has a whole team and a squadron
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to do things, and that's what it's taken to get this airplane up.
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There are not many wives that would support their husband a hundred percent
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on a project like this. But I wouldn't be here today if I didn't have
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the complete support of my wife.
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Today, we have three Harriers. One is fully operational and flying.
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Very soon we'll have the two-seater operational and flying,
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and in the future I suspect that we'll have a third Harrier flying.
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I'm the temporary custodian. This is not the Art Nalls airplane,
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this is the Harrier.
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In five to 10 years, these will be the only Harriers flying anywhere.
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With the supplies we have, with the manuals we have,
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with the servicing equipment, this airplane will far outlast my ability
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to be able to pass the flight physical and safely fly it. Eventually
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my day is gonna come where I'm not gonna be able to fly
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this airplane anymore. But hopefully I will have passed it on to
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a younger generation who will be able to safely fly this airplane.
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I am a small piece of preserving this valuable piece of history.