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#81
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![]() "Frank Vaughan" wrote in message ... In message , (robert arndt) wrote: 39. Airbus A.380 How can you possibly list an aircraft that has never flown? I also believe that you should have included both the Lockheed C-130 and the Antonov heavy lifer (designation escapes me at the moment). Does not being able to remember its name mean it's not even "living in the present", let alone "history"? |
#82
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"Brett" wrote in message
... "Andrew Chaplin" wrote: | Brett wrote: | | And the two aircraft that can be considered commercial successes from | those committee meetings were the Vickers Viscount (Type IIB) and de | Havilland Dove (Type VB). A committee specification that resulted in two | commercial successes out of seven sounds like the committee was a lot | better at its job than history reports (its always the Bristol Brabazon | that gets the headline). | | I saw a Dove once. It was in a Lebanese air force hangar at Beirut, The Lebanese air force had Devons :-) My bad... but, considered among the rest of my bads, not that bad. They both look pretty much the same through a set of binos at seven Km, and they were never on a Spotter Class List. :^) -- Andrew Chaplin SIT MIHI GLADIUS SICUT SANCTO MARTINO (If you're going to e-mail me, you'll have to get "yourfinger." out.) |
#83
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"Brett" wrote in message
... "Andrew Chaplin" wrote: | Brett wrote: | | And the two aircraft that can be considered commercial successes from | those committee meetings were the Vickers Viscount (Type IIB) and de | Havilland Dove (Type VB). A committee specification that resulted in two | commercial successes out of seven sounds like the committee was a lot | better at its job than history reports (its always the Bristol Brabazon | that gets the headline). | | I saw a Dove once. It was in a Lebanese air force hangar at Beirut, The Lebanese air force had Devons :-) 'Ang on! According to this, it was Doves. http://www.worldmiltair.co.uk/aircraft/aaaacaaakn.htm -- Andrew Chaplin SIT MIHI GLADIUS SICUT SANCTO MARTINO (If you're going to e-mail me, you'll have to get "yourfinger." out.) |
#84
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"Andrew Chaplin" wrote:
| "Brett" wrote in message | ... | "Andrew Chaplin" wrote: | | Brett wrote: | | | | And the two aircraft that can be considered commercial successes | from | | those committee meetings were the Vickers Viscount (Type IIB) and | de | | Havilland Dove (Type VB). A committee specification that resulted | in | two | | commercial successes out of seven sounds like the committee was a | lot | | better at its job than history reports (its always the Bristol | Brabazon | | that gets the headline). | | | | I saw a Dove once. It was in a Lebanese air force hangar at Beirut, | | The Lebanese air force had Devons :-) | | 'Ang on! According to this, it was Doves. | http://www.worldmiltair.co.uk/aircraft/aaaacaaakn.htm Putnam's de Havilland aircraft since 1909 (page 446, 1987 edition) and a couple of other sources say they were Devons. |
#85
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On Tue, 02 Dec 2003 04:49:28 GMT, Andrew Chaplin
wrote: Brett wrote: And the two aircraft that can be considered commercial successes from those committee meetings were the Vickers Viscount (Type IIB) and de Havilland Dove (Type VB). A committee specification that resulted in two commercial successes out of seven sounds like the committee was a lot better at its job than history reports (its always the Bristol Brabazon that gets the headline). I saw a Dove once. It was in a Lebanese air force hangar at Beirut, and full of pigeon **** and bullet holes. Sad, really. I've flown a Dove. It was the one modified for Cranfield and later sold to National Test Pilot School, which is where I flew it. Had a bunch of FTE stations in the tube. Even had a trailing bomb for air data. It might still be flying there. Mary -- Mary Shafer Retired aerospace research engineer |
#86
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Frank Vaughan wrote:
In message , "John Keeney" wrote: "Frank Vaughan" wrote in message ... In message , (robert arndt) wrote: 39. Airbus A.380 How can you possibly list an aircraft that has never flown? I also believe that you should have included both the Lockheed C-130 and the Antonov heavy lifer (designation escapes me at the moment). Does not being able to remember its name mean it's not even "living in the present", let alone "history"? No, it simply means that I was tired when I posted and was looking forward to a warm, helpful, compassionate posting that would help me remember. But thanks for trying. Here you go Frank! http://www.aviaphoto.ru/antonov/ It's either the An-124 or the An-225. Seeing the An-124 flying over Oxfordshire, UK and banking into its final approach at Brize Norton is breath taking! Richard. |
#87
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Frank Vaughan wrote:
In message , "John Keeney" wrote: "Frank Vaughan" wrote in message ... In message , (robert arndt) wrote: 39. Airbus A.380 How can you possibly list an aircraft that has never flown? I also believe that you should have included both the Lockheed C-130 and the Antonov heavy lifer (designation escapes me at the moment). Does not being able to remember its name mean it's not even "living in the present", let alone "history"? No, it simply means that I was tired when I posted and was looking forward to a warm, helpful, compassionate posting that would help me remember. But thanks for trying. Here you go Frank! http://www.aviaphoto.ru/antonov/ It's either the An-124 or the An-225. Seeing the An-124 flying over Oxfordshire, UK and banking into its final approach at Brize Norton is breath taking! Richard. |
#88
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In article , Dave Kearton
writes "ArtKramr" wrote in message ... What??? No Spirit of St. Louis??? Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer The difficulty I have with the Spirit of St Louis is that it's a US national icon and that there's bound to be a fair amount of emotion tied up in defending it. Looking a little more dispassionately at the issue, I think Lindberg should be remembered long after the plane fades into the dim dark past, as it was really HIS achievement, the plane just had to be there. By the time Lucky Lindy made the crossing, he was (what ?) the 39th pilot to cross the pond - but the first to do it alone. Given what he went through and the number of pilots who disappeared while trying to do the same makes _Lindberg's_ achievement notable. He was the 92nd person to fly the Atlantic, but I don't know how many before him were pilots. Take a look at this: http://www.straightdope.com/mailbag/mtransatlantic.html and the book "The 91 Before Lindbergh" by Peter Allen. The plane that seems to have avoided the Usenet radar is the Vickers Vimy that Alcock and Brown used to FIRST fly across the Atlantic. See the above article. 1-6 (May 1919): Lieutenant Commander Albert Read of the U.S. Navy and his crew (Breese, Hinton, Rhoads, Rodd, and Stone) of the Curtiss NC-4 flew from Newfoundland to Portugal via the Azores. Alcock and Beown were the first to fly across *non-stop* While single crew crossings are fairly commonplace these days, they're dwarfed in numbers by the multi crew crossings that occur in their hundreds daily, unescorted and unrefuelled - as pioneered by Alcock and Brown in June 1919. I've only done it 6 times, surrounded by a couple of hundred of other people on each occasion. Cheers Dave Kearton -- Peter Ying tong iddle-i po! |
#89
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On Fri, 05 Dec 2003 22:17:14 -0700, Frank Vaughan
wrote: In message , "Richard Brooks" wrote: Frank Vaughan wrote: In message , "John Keeney" wrote: No, it simply means that I was tired when I posted and was looking forward to a warm, helpful, compassionate posting that would help me remember. But thanks for trying. Here you go Frank! http://www.aviaphoto.ru/antonov/ It's either the An-124 or the An-225. Seeing the An-124 flying over Oxfordshire, UK and banking into its final approach at Brize Norton is breath taking! Richard. Thank you Richard. I saw one of those puppies parked on a taxiway in Denver one and wished that a 747 has been nearby for a size comparison. I suspect that it has carved a unique roll in aviation -- perhaps as the first modern Russian aircraft to have a worldwide peacetime role (I'm excluding the former soviet puppets that use its pax airlines). What's really surprising was seeing one at a US airbase in Afghanistan. Not personally of course but the USAF web site had a photo of a guy on the ground guiding in an AN-124 |
#90
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![]() "Scott Ferrin" wrote in message ... On Fri, 05 Dec 2003 22:17:14 -0700, Frank Vaughan wrote: What's really surprising was seeing one at a US airbase in Afghanistan. Not personally of course but the USAF web site had a photo of a guy on the ground guiding in an AN-124 The British forces have been chartering them for heavy lift for some years now. Keith |
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