botach wrote:
Saw this on another site ,aparently put down to north east traffic police.
Would be interesting to know if true ---
Subject: Mr Plod clocks geezer at 300mph and nearly gets fried.
A report has been received that two traffic patrol officers
from North Berwick were involved in an unusual incident
whilst checking for speeding motorists on the A1 Great North
Road, between Oldhamstocks and Grantshouse.
Last May, they were using a hand-held radar device to 'trap'
unwary motorists on the Edinburgh to London trunk road.
One of the unnamed officers used the device to check the
speed of a vehicle approaching over the crest of a hill.
He was somewhat surprised to find that the speed
recorded was off the scale , in excess of 300 mph. The $5000
machine had then seized up and could not be re-set by the
bemused PCs.
The radar had in fact latched onto a NATO Tornado aircraft
in the North Sea, which was taking part in a low flying
exercise over The Borders and Southern Scotland.
Following a complaint by Sir William Sutherland, Chief
Constable of Lothian & Borders Police to the RAFG Liaison
Office, it was revealed that the officers could be classed
as 'very fortunate'!!
The tactile computer onboard the Tornado had not only
detected and jammed the hostile radar equipment, but had
automatically armed a Sidewinder Air-to-Ground Missile,
ready to neutralise the perceived threat. Luckily the Dutch
Pilot was alerted to the missile status and was able to
over-ride the automatic protection system before the missile
launched.
The Police have so far declined to comment, although it is
understood that officers will be advised to point the radar
guns inland, in future.
--- Item in the Berwickshire Gazette.
It's an old story certainly, RAFG (Germany) was disbanded in the 1990s.
When I first heard it, the aircraft concerned was a Harrier.
The aircraft is unlikely to have been carrying live weapons, although its not impossible.
The AIM9L Sidewinder is an IR air-air missile, not an air to surface weapon. It would have been of no use against a radar source.
So the story is quite probably largely rubbish although, like many of these yarns, it may be loosely based on an actual incident.