The Ukrainian Stunt Pilot Hunting Russian Drones
Key takeaways
- Letter from Kyiv The Stunt Pilot Hunting Russian Drones A Ukrainian flying ace is leveraging his aerobatics skills to protect his countrymen from nightly attacks.
- The most challenging part of an international aerobatics contest is the Free Unknown.
- In 2019, the World Intermediate Aerobatics Championship, which was held on an airfield in the Czech town of Břeclav, contained three Free Unknowns.
Letter from Kyiv The Stunt Pilot Hunting Russian Drones A Ukrainian flying ace is leveraging his aerobatics skills to protect his countrymen from nightly attacks.
Save this story Save this story Save this story. The most challenging part of an international aerobatics contest is the Free Unknown. Pilots arrive at a competition after having polished sequences of loops, stall turns, and barrel rolls. But for the Free Unknown section they learn which assortment of tricks they must perform only a day in advance. Contestants plan out how they will string together the stipulated moves in the most pleasing fashion, but they cannot rehearse the routine, except in their minds. It’s a test of imagination and airmanship that often decides the competition.
In 2019, the World Intermediate Aerobatics Championship, which was held on an airfield in the Czech town of Břeclav, contained three Free Unknowns. The winner of the first was a twenty-five-year-old Ukrainian pilot named Timur Fatkullin. At the controls of his red-and-silver Extra 330LX—a nimble German sports plane—he made the unusual move of starting his sequence upside down. He then executed a complicated routine as if he’d practiced it for months. The Ukrainian team, boosted by Fatkullin’s performance, won gold. Trevor Dugan, who served as a navigator with the R.A.F. in Afghanistan and Iraq, was on the British team, which took bronze. Fatkullin, he said, was “absolutely phenomenal.”