It isn't unusual for airline pilots to retire then find another flying job for 
a time. Many end up at Netjets but few of them last more than a year there. 
 
Up until now I haven't been interested but something just caught my eye.
 
Eric
 
https://www.wsj.com/world/ukraine-russia-drone-hunting-e2fea5fc?mod=hp_trendingnow_article_pos4
 


Hunting Russian Drones in a Prop Plane With Shotguns and Rifles


Ukrainian defenders use an array of unusual methods to fend off attacks while 
preserving stockpiles of more advanced tools

 
This month, a beaten-up, Soviet-era propeller-driven plane taxied to a halt on 
a rural runway and two of Ukraine’s top air aces clambered out, one carrying a 
rifle. The pair, clad in olive-drab flight suits, are part of a low-tech 
solution to the high-tech problem of Russian drones 
https://www.wsj.com/world/russia-iran-drone-factory-ukraine-aea9bf5b?mod=article_inline.
 
The 56-year-old pilot, who learned to fly as a hobby before the war, and the 
gunner, 38, a former auto mechanic who had never been in a plane before the 
invasion, are part of a squadron dedicated to knocking down the unmanned 
Russian attack and reconnaissance aircraft 
https://www.wsj.com/world/ukraine-russia-drone-war-adef7e49?mod=article_inline 
that are the bane of ground troops and civilians.
 
In the past year, these two unlikely air warriors have flown around 300 combat 
missions as part of the 11th Army Aviation Brigade and downed almost half the 
unit’s total of 120 drones eliminated, according to its deputy commander, Col. 
Mykola Lykhatskiy.
 
Ukraine has some of the West’s most advanced air defenses 
https://www.wsj.com/business/this-new-missile-defense-system-is-challenging-the-patriot-5068e625?mod=article_inline,
 including the Patriot missile system. It also has F-16 jets that it sometimes 
uses to down missiles and drones. But it has also developed a series of 
lower-cost tactics to counter the threat from the skies, ranging from nets to 
signal jamming 
https://www.wsj.com/world/europe/ukraine-russia-drones-fiber-optic-cable-6c96a9f1?mod=article_inline.
 
Soldiers and volunteers also man pickup truck-mounted heavy machine guns to try 
to take out explosive-laden Shahed drones. Others use vintage Soviet missiles 
fired from launchers made out of reused shipping containers.
 
Then there are the men and flying machines of the 11th. When a drone appears on 
military radar screens, crews scramble to their two-seater Yak-52 trainers, 
with a sliding glass canopy reminiscent of World War II fighters. Usually, they 
are airborne within 15 minutes.
 
Their squadron has brought military aviation back to its very beginnings in 
World War I, engaging the enemy at close range with a marksman leaning out of 
his cockpit with a gun.
 
The Yak-52 is so basic that it has no radar of its own and has to fly in the 
daytime, when the crew is guided by radio before visual contact. Their cockpit 
gets so cold in the winter they need thick jackets, gloves and old-school, 
fur-lined flying helmets.
 
Pilots sit near their planes waiting for the command to scramble. Like World 
War II pilots, they stencil drones they have shot down onto the side of their 
plane, which was later destroyed in a Russian missile attack on their air base. 
They now have another Yak.
 
Their main targets are Orlan and Zala reconnaissance drones, and Shahed 
explosive drones. The propeller-driven Orlan and Zala look like a miniature 
plane and kite, respectively, while the distinctive triangular shape of the 
Shahed has become one of the most recognizable sights of this war. The 
propeller-powered models of these drones fly at speeds of up to 115 miles an 
hour, making them easy to chase for the Yak, which can fly at over 180 miles an 
hour.
 
The successes of these planes and helicopters account for around 10% to 12% of 
the drones intercepted by Ukraine on a typical day, said Lykhatskiy.
 
 
Last month, around 11% of all long-range drones launched by Russia got through 
Ukraine’s air defenses, according to data analyzed by the Center for 
Information Resilience, a U.K.-based open-source investigations organization.
 
The Ukrainian prop planes will typically fly within 200 to 300 feet of the 
drone before the gunner opens the canopy, leans out and fires.
 
“There is such great new technology now, yet I am still hanging out of the 
cockpit shooting at drones with a shotgun,” said the auto mechanic-turned 
gunner. He likened the experience to shooting a gun while riding a horse. The 
gunner has tried a number of weapons and currently favors a German Haenel MK55 
automatic rifle.

Sometimes pilots get so close they can use their plane’s wings to tilt the 
drone’s wings and send it off course, said Lykhatskiy. British pilots used that 
tactic in World War II against Germany’s V-1, widely considered the world’s 
first missile.
 
 
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