If you've ever felt nervous about your flight coming in to land, spare a thought for this pilot.
In a world first, Italian aviator Dario Costa landed his small plane on a cargo train moving at 75mph (120 kmph) before immediately lifting off again.
The daredevil feat required perfect execution - a combination of synchronised speed and precise aerodynamic control.
Mr Costa could only see the landing surface in the final seconds of approach, and had to battle heavy turbulence from the train along with shifting air speeds.
Even the tiniest mismatch between the plane and train velocity could have resulted in the pilot overshooting the landing or failing to line up correctly.
A video shows him grappling with the aircraft's joystick as he battled to manoeuvre it into place.
Eventually, the wheels of his Zivko Edge 540 touched down on the cargo container, before vertically taking off into a steep climb.
Mr Costa, who performed the stunt in Afyonkarahisar, Turkey, for Red Bull, said: 'The train landing was one of the most challenging and demanding projects of my career.'
In a world first, Italian aviator Dario Costa landed his small plane on a cargo train moving at 75mph (120 kmph) before immediately lifting off again. Here, he can be seen approaching the moving train
Mr Costa could only see the landing surface in the final seconds of approach, and had to battle heavy turbulence from the train along with shifting air speeds
Eventually, the wheels of his Zivko Edge 540 touched down on the cargo container, before vertically taking off into a steep climb
Preparations for the extraordinary feat began two years ago, when engineering and flight teams developed simulations and conducted controlled tests to replicate the landing dynamics.
Mr Costa was able to 'practice' using a car along a moving platform in the weeks before the attempt was carried out.
Finally, on February 15, it was time to try it for real.
In the footage, shared online, the nine-carriage train can be seen travelling at top speed through the Turkish countryside while Mr Costa flies his plane overhead.
He slowly descends towards the final carriage, which has a mini painted runway on top, grappling with the controls as the aircraft judders up and down and side-to-side thanks to turbulence.
Eventually the plane's two front wheels and tiny back wheel touch down - for just a second or so - before he pulls it steeply up and into the air.
Shouts of delight and cheering from the cockpit are shown on camera, before it pans to Mr Costa safely back on the ground.
Commenting on the success Red Bull wingsuit athlete Sebastian Alvarez wrote: 'You smooth operator'.
A close-up showing the plane's two front wheels and single smaller back wheel touching down on the top of the cargo train
Mr Costa, who performed the stunt in Afyonkarahisar, Turkey, for Red Bull, said: 'The train landing was one of the most challenging and demanding projects of my career'
Mr Costa smiles with a colleague after landing safely back on ground. Filippo Barbero, the project's aviation consultant, described him as 'a true magician'
The daredevil feat in numbers
- Landing speed: 75mph (120kmph)
- Wind direction: 5kmph (3 knots) tailwind
- Track length: 1.5 miles (2.5km)
- Time limit: Maximum 50 seconds to approach, touch down, land and take off
- Plane size: 7.5m (24.6ft) wingspan, 7m (23ft) length
- Landing gear width: 1.7m (5.6ft)
Canadian springboard diver Molly Carlson said: 'I'M SO STRESSED', while another fan added: 'Red Bull making movie scenes in real life.'
Red Bull joked that the feat 'explains the train delay'.
'There were so many variables to measure, but the greatest test was learning to land blind on a very small moving runway - relying only on cognitive and flying skills,' Mr Costa said.
'The most critical aspect was the alignment with the train, so precision had to be absolute, and he achieved that,' added Filippo Barbero, the project's aviation consultant.
'During a project like this, there's no room for emotions - Dario is a true magician.'
Mr Costa, who is 45 years old, made his first solo flight at the age of 16 and is now 'obsessed with aerobatic flying'.
This accomplishment joins a range of incredible feats he has pulled off over the years, including his 2021 Tunnel pass.
This achievement made it into the Guinness World Records for 'Longest tunnel flown through with an aeroplane', measuring 1,730m (5,675 feet).
Despite a cross-wind, the pilot perfectly navigated his plane through the 360-metre tunnel and into a longer second one, which measured 1,160 metres.
The whole stunt took 43.44 seconds to complete, with Mr Costa celebrating with a 360-degree loop and punching his fist in delight after emerging into the open air.
After he touched down, the pilot said he was 'very emotional' about his achievement, which was more than a year in the planning and required a team of 40 people.
He said: 'You don't know what to expect. You don't know if it's going to go good. I have never flown in a tunnel in my life. Nobody [has] ever done [it].
'So, there was a big question mark in my head, if everything would have been like we expected, or there would have been something to improvise. So yeah, it was a big relief of course, but big, big happiness. That was the biggest emotion of the two.'