A Concorde flew so high over the Red Sea that the mighty US Navy got scared and rushed F-14 Tomcats to intercept it. So fast was the jet that only when a veteran pilot chasing it took out his camera and zoomed, he realized their blazing target was the supersonic airliner //
“As we swung our nose in the direction of the vector we got, I got an immediate lock on an extremely fast and high-flying aircraft,” recalled David “Hey Joe” Parsons, the Radar Intercept Officer in the rear seat. The AWG-9 radar displayed a large lead cue, something you only see when the target is moving extraordinarily fast at altitude. The Tomcat began to climb. //
The Television Camera System should have provided a magnified visual, but the angle and altitude difference made the picture blur into haze. Parsons reached down into his flight bag and pulled out his personal 300 mm camera lens. He spotted a thin white contrail far above them. He steadied the lens, focused, and the shape came into clarity. “As I twisted the lens, the beautiful silhouette of the Concorde came into focus.” There was no threat. Only grace. //
Contrary to popular imagination, the Tomcat did not chase the Concorde speed-for-speed. An F-14 does not drag race a Mach 2 airliner. Instead, it turns toward the point the radar predicts the target will be, accelerates, climbs, and allows closure rate to do the work. For a moment, two icons of aviation existed in the same piece of sky, one built to defend, the other built to outrun time.