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Pacific Airshow on the Gold Coast, Australia, 2024

newt

Well Known Member
In Australia:

The Freedom to Fly Formation Display Team (aka "Freedom Formation") performed an 18 minute aerobatic formation handling display at the Pacific Airshow on the Gold Coast.

We made our debut last year, and the event organizers seemed to like what they saw, so they invited us back.

Across three days, we showed an estimated audience of a quarter of a million people what Vans amateur-built aircraft can do.

Our team is coached and choreographed by Jeremy Miller, one of Australia's most accomplished aerobatic display pilots. It's led by RV-14 builder Trent Stewart ("tasesq" on these forums) in Jeremy's Yak-55. The other 12 members are flying RV-6, RV-6A, RV-7, RV-7A and RV-8 airplanes with different engine and prop combinations, producing a fairly challenging display flying environment where we all have different performance profiles but have to fly closely together all the same.

Our routine starts with a 3-phase bomb-burst, where the 13 airplanes in tight formation break off into individual elements. After that, it's a slowly rising crescendo of controlled chaos, where the elements rejoin into different figures then break apart again. We divide the display into "high box" and "low box," with something happening in each one all the time.

After a simultaneous fan-break and 8-ship combat trail, we form-up into a 13-ship balbo for a final smoke-on orbit at crowd centre, filling the box with enough smoke to make the next act complain about IMC, before exiting stage left.

It's a tremendous amount of fun to fly, and if our audience's reactions are any guide, it's also a lot of fun to watch.

We've performed three times, Fri-Sun. During that time we've also generated national media focus for homebuilt airplanes (for example: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08...eturn-to-pacific-airshow-gold-coast/104235622)

Tomorrow we'll all fly home to our respective homes in three Australian states, and resume our careers as accountants, IT specialists, carpenters, etc. And hopefully next year we'll be invited back to get another go.

We can't do what we do without the support of our families (who were in the audience this weekend seeing the routine we've been working on for most of the last year for the first time), our corporate sponsors (which I don't think I can name here without flouting the rules) and the superb efforts of our support crew:

Matilda Mendham, Crew Chief.
Angela Stevenson, Commentator.
Dominic Hubert, Team Photographer.
Kiana Kosseris, UNICOM safety watch and air display musical director.
Lorenzo Hariman, Team videographer.

We are the Freedom to Fly Formation Display Team:

Trent Stewart
Angela Garvey
Gavin Nour
James Weightman
Don Harvie
Mark Newton
Martin Russell
Ollie Geherghty
Kevin White
Glenn Bridgland
Peter Grogan
Eddie Seve
Brayden Rowley

Instructed, coached, mentored, choreographed and supported by the extraordinary Jeremy Miller.

Back next year.

- mark


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Congratulations on another outstanding round of performances. I received video clips from my sister-in-law on Saturday and what I got to see looked fantastic. Well done.

Thanks for sharing the link. :)
 
This moment in the Sunday morning briefing, hosted by Chris "Tibbsy" Tibbetts, will stick with me for a long time:
We'd pre-briefed to say, "G'day boss!" in unison when he reached us in the roll call, and he stopped momentarily to say, "Before I go any further, I must say I don't think there are too many people in this room who have gone to an airshow of this size and said, 'I can't wait to see the RVs fly,'" followed by a round of applause from the room. We're all humbled, and thank you.

A typical Pacific Airshow day:

  • 5:30am -- Alarm goes off.
  • 6:30am -- Arrive at the morning briefing area for breakfast.
  • 7:00am -- Morning briefing, hosted by one of the Air Boss team members.
  • 8:00am -- Everyone at the briefing scatters on the winds. Pacific Airshow is "remote" from all the airfields. Display acts in the Australian incarnation operate out of Southport, Coolangatta, Archerfield, Brisbane, Amberley, Ballina and Newcastle.
  • 8:35am -- Our team arrives in three minivans at Southport. Preflight inspections.
  • 9:30am -- Team briefing.
  • 10:00am -- At least a couple of walk-throughs on the ramp. Hope nobody is taking pictures because we all look ridiculous.
  • 10:30am -- Engine start.
  • 10:40am -- Takeoff.
  • 10:50am -- Arrive in the hold.
  • 10:58am -- Called from the hold into the box by the airboss. "The airspace is yours!"
  • 11:06am -- Routine concludes.
  • 11:15am -- 13-ship recovery at Southport.
  • 11:30am -- Service the fleet with fuel and smoke oil so we don't have to do it tomorrow morning. Pack the airplanes away in hangars.
  • 12:00pm -- Remember to eat.
  • 12:30pm -- Minivans back to show-centre.
  • 1:20pm -- After threading through Gold Coast traffic, make our way to the autograph signing area.
  • 1:45pm -- Some other act (Navy Seals parachutes? RAAF Roulettes? Matt Hall?) finishes autographs, we take our seats and start signing posters, hats and t-shirts for seemingly hundreds of avgeeks, families and kids. If we can inspire just one of them, the trip will have been worth it.
  • 2:45pm -- The next act comes to push us out of the way. Enough time left in the day to see the T-33, the Yak-110 and the F-35 displays. Incidentally, Jeff Boerboon appears to be a completely normal person, which surprised the heck out of me tbqh.
  • 3:15pm -- Show's over for the day. Back tomorrow!
  • (5:30pm -- Assemble for an adult beverage and see if we can get pilots, family members and support crew to agree on what we should eat for dinner)

It's a hectic mile-a-minute day the whole time. Yesterday morning was the first time in a week and a half I haven't been "on the clock" all day, and I spent two hours bushwalking in the Gold Coast hinterland before evacuating for Brisbane in the late afternoon, and it was marvellous. I need a holiday from my holiday :)

Today's mission was to depart Archerfield Jet Base through a 1200' overcast on an IFR flight plan for Armidale in the New England region of New South Wales, consume a Moroccan Chicken Wrap washed down with a cappuccino for lunch, then VFR in CAVOK through the Hunter Valley back home to Sydney. 2.9 hour magic carpet ride.

The RV-6 is an amazing machine. It's eaten up so many different types of flying over the last ten days: IFR in actual, long distance touring, aerobatic airshow performance, a scud-run through inclement weather from our practice area in the highlands down to the coast. It's excelled at everything I've asked it to do, and now it's home and needs a wash.

- mark
 
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