Blue Impulse
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Blue Impulse 11th Squardron 4th Air Wing |
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Blue Impulse (T-4)
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Active | April 12, 1960 to Present |
Country | Japan |
Branch | Japan Air Self-Defense Force |
Type | Aerobatics |
Role | Aerobatic maneuver |
Garrison/HQ | Matsushima Air Base |
Motto | Challenge for the Creation. |
Colors | Blue White |
Insignia | |
Identification symbol |
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Aircraft flown | |
Trainer | 9 Kawasaki T-4s *Note: two aircraft are spares |
Blue Impulse (ブルーインパルス Burū Inparusu?), or 11 Squadron, is the aerobatic demonstration team of the Japan Air Self-Defense Force. Originally founded in 1960 as a team of six F-86 Sabres, the team switched to the Mitsubishi T-2 in 1980 and then to the Kawasaki T-4 in 1995. They are based at Matsushima Air Base, which was heavily damaged by a tsunami on March 11, 2011.
Aircraft
Aircraft | Origin | In Service * | Service ** | reference column |
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North American F-86F Sabre | United States | 34 | 1960–1981 | JASDF Technical Research Section. 5 aircraft formation. |
Mitsubishi T-2 | Japan | 11 | 1982–1995 | 4 AW 21 Sq. Technical Research Section. 6 aircraft formation. |
Kawasaki T-4 | Japan | 11 | 1995– | 4 AW 11 Sq. 6 aircraft formation. |
* Number of aircraft used by the Blue Impulse acrobatic team.
** Aircraft service with the Blue Impulse acrobatic team.
History
The first unofficial Japanese aerobatic team was formed in 1958 at Hamamatsu airbase. The team used F-86F Sabre fighters which did not have a special color scheme. After four demonstrations, the team was disbanded. The next year the USAF Thunderbirds visited Japan, and inspired Japan's Air Self Defense Force (JASDF) commanding officers to establish an official aerobatic team. In 1960 the new team was formed at Hamamatsu airbase flying five F-86F fighters, with three of the pilots coming from Japan's 1958 team.
The first demonstration of the new team "Tenryu" (named after a river near the air base), was on March 4, 1960 in Hamamatsu. However this name was hard to pronounce in western languages, so the team was renamed Blue Impulse. The planes were equipped with smoke generators using five different colors for each plane: white, red, blue, green, and yellow. The planes were painted in silver, light blue, blue and pink; on the leader's plane, the blue is replaced by gold. In the next year, all five jets received special demonstration paint schemes of white and blue. In 1964, Blue Impulse performed at the opening of the Olympic Games in Tokyo, drawing the Olympic rings in the air with colored smoke. In 1970, at the opening of Expo '70 in Osaka, the team drew "Expo '70" in the air. In February 1982, after 545 air demonstrations, Blue Impulse stopped using the F-86F Sabre and instead began using Japanese-built Mitsubishi T-2 jets. The first air show with the new planes was on June 25 at the team's new Matsushima airbase.
On November 14, 1982, during a bomb-burst maneuver at a Hamamatsu air display, plane #4 failed to pull up in time and crashed into a building, killing the pilot and injured 11 people on the ground. This accident brought a halt to the team's performances for the year.
At Expo '90 in Osaka, Blue Impulse performed at the opening event and drew the "Expo '90" logo in the air.
Blue Impulse suffered another accident on July 4, 1991 over the Pacific Ocean, as planes #2 and #4 crashed during a training flight. This disaster again stopped the team's performances for a year.
The team's last performance with the Mitsubishi T-2 was in December 1995, after 175 demonstrations with these aircraft. The new Blue Impulse aircraft became the Japanese-built Kawasaki T-4 trainer, and the first show with these planes was on April 5, 1996. In 1997, the team made their first foreign debut at the Nellis AFB air show in Nevada, USA. In 1998 Blue Impulse performed at the Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan.
On July 4, 2000, during a training flight, planes #5 and #6 crashed, claiming the lives of three people. The incident occurred about 25 km east of Matsushima Air Base.
Blue Impulse also performed at the 2002 FIFA World Cup; on June 4, 2002, they performed at the opening of the Japan versus Belgium match.
Gallery
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Blue Impulse T-4.jpg
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Hyakuri biT-4.JPG
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Blue Impulse 20091103 1.jpg
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Blue Impulse Corkscrew.jpg
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Japan Air Self-Defense Force Blue Impulse F-86 T-2 T-4.jpg
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BlueImpulse sakura01.jpg
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Japan Air Self-Defense Force Blue Impulse T-2.jpg
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Blueimpulse(flying)01.jpg
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JASDF Blue Impulse team at Yokota AB 1981.JPEG
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Japan air self defense force Kawasaki T-4 Blue Impulse RJST Trail to Diamond Roll.JPG
References in pop culture
The mercenary air team "Red Impulse" and its leader from the anime series Science Ninja Team Gatchaman take their name from the Blue Impulse.
When characters in another anime, Urusei Yatsura, are hit with enough force to send them flying into the distance, they sometimes shout "Blue Impulse!"
The team have since been immortalised in its own videogame, titled Aero Dancing featuring Blue Impulse.
The flight demonstration team called "Green Impulse" in the anime series Hyperdimension Neptunia: The Animation might have taken their name from the Blue Impulse.
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Blue Impulse. |
- Japan Air Self-Defense Force - Blue Impulse Official Site (Japanese)
- Blue Impulse Museum (Japanese)
- Blue Impulse Fan Site (Japanese)