A little something different today, in MSFS. Today I'm flying the Yak-18T from Vnokovo Airport over Moscow.
The Yak-18T is not to be confused with the Yak-18, a Soviet military trainer with an almost identical name. The Yak-18T is a different plane, introduced in the 1960s to train Aeroflot pilots.
Although the Yak-18T is not that much larger than a Cessna 172, it is heavier and requires a more powerful radial engine (360-400 horsepower, vs 180 for the Cessna).
Here's the lovely inside. One of the things I've come to appreciate about modern civil aviation planes is the standardized cockpit layout that has developed. You know where to find everything. The Yak-18T, like a WW2 fighter, just has instruments laid out every which way.
It's not exactly obvious where to look, even when (some) things are helpfully labeled in English. I'm assuming that the altimeter works in meters, and the airspeed indicator in km/h, but I'm just guessing here.
I've got a throttle and a propeller pitch knob, but I don't see any fuel mixture knob. Okay. I'm not going to be flying high enough to need one anyway. (The knob to open and close the engine cowling helps with airflow to cool the engine when you're taking off or taxiing).
Enough, let's get out of here. First thing I notice is, you have to be very careful while taxiing. It lets you turn very sharply, but if you're going too fast you'll tip over.
Moscow has a ton of airports, and Vnukovo is one of the closest and busiest of them. It was originally built at the outset of World War II using gulag labor.
I'm using real weather, so maybe some of you Russian Twitter trolls can tell me if it's reasonably accurate today or not.
I'm approaching Moscow from the southwest, overflying Moscow State University, famously known (along with several similar towers dotting the city) as Stalin's Wedding Cake.
Just past it is Luzhniki Stadium, home to the Torpedo Moscow and Spartak Moscow soccer teams. To the right is the green expanse of Gorky Park along the river.
Approaching the Kremlin straight ahead, with the golden-domed Cathedral of Christ the Savior to the bottom left below.
The Kremlin below, with Red Square to its right. No, I'm not going to try to land there like that kid with his Cessna.
Another view of the Kremlin and Red Square. Lenin's Tomb is the little red ziggurat between the two Russian flags. The large building across from it is the GUM department store.
Hello, Vladimir! Can you come out and play?
Maybe he's not home.
Flying to the north side of Moscow now, with its landmark Ostankino Television Tower (to the left side of my view).
This is the area where I stayed when I first visited Moscow in the summer of 1989.
The Yak-18T is no longer produced, but apparently it is popular with some private pilots both inside and outside Russia because its sturdy construction allows it to sustain high G-forces, which makes it suitable for aerobatics.
Flying past "Moscow City", the modern business district of Moscow, built to the west of the city's historic center after the collapse of the Soviet Union
Another view of the modern skyscraper quarter of "Moscow City".
Time to head back southwest, over Moscow State University, to land back at Vnukovo Airport.
To be honest, I have no idea what the recommended approach speeds and flap settings are for landing. I do know you lower the landing gear below 200 km/h. After that, I just try to keep it aimed at the runway and well into the "white" portion of the airspeed indicator.
I don't know if it's the sim or the plane itself, but I found the Yak-18T really super floaty over the runway, even with full flaps and power down to idle. I just kept sailing along about 10 feet over the runway waiting for it to settle.
Well, hope you enjoyed this introduction to a plane I know I've never heard of before. I'd love to find a manual that actually tells me how to fly it!
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I no longer feel like I belong in this country. On a deeply personal level, its values are no longer my values, as they once were. My persistence in it feels increasingly strange and unwelcome.
This is not some angry declaration. The feeling perplexes me, more than anything else.
I say this as someone who served in the military, worked in politics, and spoke proudly and fondly of our country while living abroad.
Well, so it has come to pass. I cannot say I am surprised, because I did see it coming, but it is saddening nonetheless. I will not say much, because I don't trust myself to. But I do think this nation has made a grave mistake. How grave, we shall only learn in time.
This is not the country that I spent a lifetime, at home and abroad, loving and defending. It is something else, and what exactly that means for me I cannot yet say.
I'm cautious about sayihg what I really feel right now, especially on this platform, because I know it would be mocked. And that, itself, is a symptom of what I see, the glee that many now take in other Americans' sadness and fear. We are remaking ourselves in his image.
Then you're a fool. We have a democratic republic. I've been a limited-government conservative Republican my whole life. In fact, some of my major criticisms of Trump are that he is too much a big-government interventionist in the economy.
This inanity about "the US is not a democracy, it's a republic" is getting way too prevalent. The US has a republican form of government - as does China and North Korea. Unlike them, it is democratic in that it derives its authority from the consent of the governed.
"The US is not a democracy, it's a republic" is a line that comes from the old John Birch Society (which was drummed out of the mainstream Republican Party because of its extreme conspiratorial views) based on a very ignorant reading of how the Founders used the term democracy.
If Musk tried to withhold Starlink services to aid a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, our Defense Dept should sit him down and tell him he going to restore it or the U.S. government is appropriating the company in the interests of national security. Full stop.
I’m usually for the U.S. government taking a hands-off approach to business, but we’re talking about a wartime scenario that would almost certainly involve the U.S. in a peer-to-peer conflict and there’d be no room for fooling around.
And quite frankly if he was having conversations with any adversary country about it that would be very problematic in and of itself.
1. There are times when a thread makes so many important mistakes and feeds into so many misconceptions that it's worthwhile to address it point by point. My apologies.
2. It is true that Trump's tariffs against China were ostensibly imposed for the purpose of forcing China to alter it own unfair trade practices - in large part because the President's legal authority to levy special tariffs requires him to cite this as the reason.
3. However, it was unclear from the start what the "ask" was from China - what exactly the Trump Admin wanted China to do that would allow the tariffs to be lifted. And Trump repeatedly talked about tariffs being good and beneficial in their own right.
The reason the bills are “mammoth” is that they includes hundreds, even thousands of legislative changes on a wide variety of unrelated topics. Basically a “bill of bills”.
Where AI could help us by offering some context to what these often small changes actually mean, in terms of policy. Often it’s hard to understand what changing “and” to “or” in Clause 81 of Title II refers to or the impact it could have.