The teenage son follows the pilot Father Paul Bennet in Aerobatics Airshow

In other sessions, Paul Bennet will perform aerobatic soloist in his 1948 Fury fighter and will land a pipeline puppy on the roof of a truck.
On Friday evening he will also launch fireworks from a Cessna 185 for a fireworks display.
Jett Bennet as a child in 2008.
But his pride and joy are his yellow and red biplane wolf Pitts in which he will make aerobadies as a soloist on Saturday and Sunday.
It promises a low -level aerobazing display with forward launches, double hammer tips and papers of torque in “the coolest plane ever built”.
A plane that Jett dreams of flying by plane, but does not yet have the experience of doing it, is the fury of the sea of his father, in which he would do “aerobadies as a gentleman”-proves to be loops and rolls-“very easy things, you don’t want to excessively stressful the plane”.
“It’s an unreal plane,” says Jett. “But I need a little more experience. I only have 400 hours of flight. Dad has about 10,000 hours.
Jett and his sisters on a light plane.
“It is a great war bird. It has a lot of power (3000 horses) and you must be at the top of the game. Everything is reduced to experience.”
The organizers expect hundreds of thousands of people they crowd in the ISSHOW, they held each other every two years. There will be over 900 exhibitors from 28 countries.
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Paul Bennet says it is nice to see the euphoria from the crowd “when you just did things that people thought they were impossible in airplanes”.
It was nice to fly next to his son, but Jett had to test himself. “If he weren’t very good, he wouldn’t want with me,” says Paul.
“Listen and is not guided by the ego. He has a rather level head. This really helps.
“He has a good coordination for the eyes, he is good in sport, he is good at motorbike and is good at flying.”
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