Been discussing all day on what causes the bang at the end of each display the Rafale did (Yesterday and Today) when over the 27 field.
It is apparent that those underneath and just infront hear a very loud abrupt bang (I was directly below yesterday along with quite a few others) and those who are further away, several hundred meters to the left or right of it do not hear it as loud. (Going by speaking to others).
Yesterday when the Rafale was overtaking the Super E at the end of the practice a nice shock cone appeared around the Rafale nose and mid fuselage and engulfing the fuel tank followed by a very loud (to us underneath) bang before he let off the burners and slowed down to approach.
Everyone in the immediate vicinity was "Wow, what the F*** was that?" as it was much louder than the two jets put together screaming overhead.
According to those under it today it was slightly louder but i cannot confirm as i wasn't there today.
The person i was with caught it on video although the wind (25kts gusting 30kts) drowns out much of it however you can clearly hear it. Another person also did a video, on youtube here
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V_nyQKIUmgQ" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
It is not half as loud as it was to hear by ear underneath but you can make out the bang on this audio....
Perhaps it wasn't a sonic boom but it must have been "very" close. The shock cone did appear and there was a very loud bang straight away, if not a sonic boom, or should i say, nudging the barrier, what is it that the Rafale pilot does to do it on both days in the exact location. Is it the "nudging" of the barrier?
The video half way through slows down and you can clearly hear a noise like a shotgun going off and nearer the end, slows down a lot to reveal the shock cone although not half as visible as we saw it from our position (and Mictheslik reveals in his picture further down this thread).
It seems the Rafale at other shows pushes the "barrier" into submission again with a more lovely shock cone but no bang as it was 0.95
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dfYwXhTT ... re=related" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Granted, a proper sonic boom is "much" louder than what we heard at Yeovilton and more destructive and shock cones don't necessarily mean its close or going supersonic but an explanation from anyone that knows would be nice instead of calling it nonsense. As there clearly was a loud bang.