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The hugely impressive South Korean national aerobatic team 'The Black Eagles' in their UK debut at the RAF Waddington airshow.
So impressive, they picked up the Boeing Trophy for best display team 2012.
The general 'buzz' in the crowd was the real stamp of approval. Rarely have I heard quite so many 'Wow's and 'Woo-hoo's at an airshow!
The team fly eight KAI T50B Golden Eagle supersonic trainers. This new jet is based on the proven F16 platform, but with significant changes.
The logistics of getting the team and its T50 jets over here is a story in itself:
The aircraft were taken to pieces, air-freighted from Wonjo, South Korea across the globe to Manchester International, taken by road to RAF Leeming, where they were carefully reassembled by team engineers, air tested and scrutinised for display approval. The team then visited RAF Scampton to do a display work-up with the RAF Red Arrows, before beginning its UK tour which included Waddington, RIAT and Farnborough airshows.
T-50B ROKAF Black Eagles at Waddington Air Show 2012. The Black Eagles were making their European debut.
81 days - 11 1/2 weeks old - Nessie will be fledging soon. The average for Black Eagles is 95 days, but this one was from a 2nd, later nesting, so he may go early
The container cargo ship Black Eagle, passing close by Miller Knox Reg. Park. Heading for Richmond Inner Harbor.
Black Eagle
After the three perched on the little strip of land... there was this fellow to my left and behind... unobserved and quietly waiting
The black eagle (Ictinaetus malaiensis) is a bird of prey. Like all eagles, it is in the family Accipitridae, and is the only member of the genus Ictinaetus. They soar over forests in the hilly regions of tropical Asia, especially the Indian Subcontinent and adjoining regions. They hunt mammals and birds, particularly at their nests. They are easily identified by their widely splayed and long primary "fingers", the characteristic silhouette, slow flight and yellow ceres and legs that contrast with their dark feathers.
The black eagle breeds in tropical Asia. Race perniger (Hodgson, 1836) is found in the Himalayan foothills west through Nepal into the Indian states of Himachal Pradesh and Jammu & Kashmir, and in the forests of the Eastern and Western Ghats in peninsular India and Sri Lanka. The species also extends into the Aravalli range of northwestern India. The nominate race malaiensis (Temminck, 1822) is found in Burma, southern China (Yunnan, Fujian) and Taiwan, into the Malay Peninsula. The Ictinaetus malaiensis perniger subspecies of the Indian Subcontinent is the most widespread. They are generally residents and no migrations have been observed.
In a study in southern India, it was found to favour forests with good forest cover and was absent from areas where the cover was less than 50%.
The black eagle is a large raptor at about 70–80 cm in length and 164–178 cm in wingspan, with a weight of between 1000 and 1600 grams. Adults have all-black plumage, with a yellow bill base (cere) and feet. The wings are long and pinched in at the innermost primaries giving a distinctive shape. The tail shows faint barring and upper tail covers paler. When perched the wing tips reach till or exceed the tail tip. The wings are held in a shallow V (wings just above the horizontal plane) in flight. Seen on hot afternoons, scouring the treetops for a nest to maraud, this bird is easily spotted by its jet black colour, large size, and a 'characteristic' slow flight, sometimes just above the canopy.
Sexes are similar, but young birds have a buff head, underparts and underwing coverts. The wing shape helps to distinguish this species from the dark form of crested hawk-eagle, (Spizaetus cirrhatus). The tarsi are fully feathered and the toes are relatively stout and short with long claws (particularly on the inner toe) that are less strongly curved than in other birds of prey.
The species name is spelt malayensis in most publications but the original spelling used by Temminck in his description uses the spelling malaiensis according to a 2011 finding of some of the original covers of the part publications leading to taxonomists applying the principle of priority and rejecting any later spelling emendations.
The black eagle eats mammals, birds and eggs. It is a prolific nest-predator and is known for its slow flight just over the canopy. Due to this eagle's ability to remain aloft for long periods with minimal effort, the Lepcha people of India's Darjeeling district described it as a bird that never sat down. The curved claws and wide gape allow it to pick up eggs of birds from nests. Along with swallow-tailed kites they share the unique habit of carrying away an entire nest with nestlings to a feeding perch. Squirrels, macaques and many species of birds emit alarm calls when these birds are spotted soaring over the forest. The Indian giant squirrel has been noted as a prey of this species and young bonnet macaques may also fall prey to them.
The courtship display involves steep dives with folded wings with swoops up in a U shape into a vertical stall. They build a platform nest, 3 to 4 feet wide, on a tall tree overlooking a steep valley. One or two white eggs which are blotched in brown and mauve may be laid during the nesting season between January and April. The nest site may be reused year after year.
Black Eagle team, Korean Aerobatic team.
T50 - designed by LM and KAI, manufactured in South Korea.
ADEX 2017, Aerospace & Defense EXhibition
Seoul Airport, South Korea
10-0054 T-50B ROKAF Black Eagles at Waddington Air Show 2012. The Black Eagles were making their European Debut.
The Black Eagles, Shawee, and Big Chief Kevin Goodman & the Flaming Arrows found a hole in the rainy weather on Sunday as they paraded around the Fairgounds at Jazz Fest
The Republic of Korea Air Force's Black Eagles seen during their superb aerobatic team display at RIAT 2022.