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On 12/10/2010 23:44, Canuck wrote:
? "®i©ardo" wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 01:31, Canuck wrote: ?....I think this is a Convair of some sort. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nolinor_Aviation A Convair 580. Bit of a chunky baby, that one. -- Moving things in still pictures You are correct Sir! :-) My first flight was as a wide eyed kid in a Convair 440. N. Ah, the joys of youth, eh? -- Moving things in still pictures |
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"®i©ardo" wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 23:44, Canuck wrote: ? "®i©ardo" wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 01:31, Canuck wrote: ?....I think this is a Convair of some sort. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nolinor_Aviation A Convair 580. Bit of a chunky baby, that one. -- Moving things in still pictures You are correct Sir! :-) My first flight was as a wide eyed kid in a Convair 440. N. Ah, the joys of youth, eh? You bet. I was only 4 or so at the time and this was my first flight so it was quite a treat. I think everyone remembers their first flight best because it is the first. Care to share your first flight experience and what you remember? Nick |
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![]() "Canuck" wrote in message ... ? "®i©ardo" wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 23:44, Canuck wrote: ? "®i©ardo" wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 01:31, Canuck wrote: ?....I think this is a Convair of some sort. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nolinor_Aviation A Convair 580. Bit of a chunky baby, that one. -- Moving things in still pictures You are correct Sir! :-) My first flight was as a wide eyed kid in a Convair 440. N. Ah, the joys of youth, eh? You bet. I was only 4 or so at the time and this was my first flight so it was quite a treat. I think everyone remembers their first flight best because it is the first. Care to share your first flight experience and what you remember? Nick My first flight was as a eight or nine year old lad. It was in an Auster from the beach at Cleethorpes. I was impressed to see the horizon appear to tilt as the plane banked and to see Grimsby docks as we flew over the Humber estuary. Five bob well spent, in my opinion. Cheers, Indrek Aavisto -- Criticism is easy; achievement is difficult W.S. Churchill |
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"Indrek Aaviso" wrote in message "®i©ardo" wrote in message Thanks for sharing your experiences! They sound like a lot of fun although I don't think you could get me to jump out of a perfectly good airplane! ![]() N. |
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On 13/10/2010 23:01, Canuck wrote:
? "Indrek Aaviso" wrote in message "®i©ardo" wrote in message Thanks for sharing your experiences! They sound like a lot of fun although I don't think you could get me to jump out of a perfectly good airplane! ![]() N. Something I did 45 times over a six year period. There were quite a few "interesting moments". ;-) These days, however, my feet are firmly on the ground. I'm popping over to Spain next week and even doing that on a ferry! -- Moving things in still pictures |
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"Indrek Aaviso" wrote in
: "Canuck" wrote in message ... ? "®i©ardo" wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 23:44, Canuck wrote: ? "®i©ardo" wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 01:31, Canuck wrote: ?....I think this is a Convair of some sort. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nolinor_Aviation A Convair 580. Bit of a chunky baby, that one. -- Moving things in still pictures You are correct Sir! :-) My first flight was as a wide eyed kid in a Convair 440. N. Ah, the joys of youth, eh? You bet. I was only 4 or so at the time and this was my first flight so it was quite a treat. I think everyone remembers their first flight best because it is the first. Care to share your first flight experience and what you remember? My first flight was as a eight or nine year old lad. It was in an Auster from the beach at Cleethorpes. I was impressed to see the horizon appear to tilt as the plane banked and to see Grimsby docks as we flew over the Humber estuary. Five bob well spent, in my opinion. Mine was in a Cessna (150? 172?) at the Maxville Highland Games in 1963. I was not quite 7 and I was agog for the whole 15 minutes of the flight. -- Andrew Chaplin SIT MIHI GLADIUS SICUT SANCTO MARTINO (If you're going to e-mail me, you'll have to get "yourfinger." out.) |
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On 13/10/2010 15:44, Canuck wrote:
? "®i©ardo" wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 23:44, Canuck wrote: ? "®i©ardo" wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 01:31, Canuck wrote: ?....I think this is a Convair of some sort. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nolinor_Aviation A Convair 580. Bit of a chunky baby, that one. -- Moving things in still pictures You are correct Sir! :-) My first flight was as a wide eyed kid in a Convair 440. N. Ah, the joys of youth, eh? You bet. I was only 4 or so at the time and this was my first flight so it was quite a treat. I think everyone remembers their first flight best because it is the first. Care to share your first flight experience and what you remember? Nick Well, I started later as my first ever aircraft flight was, at the age of 19, from an RAF Handley Page Hastings, whilst on my Army parachute training course. That was on 23 April 1964 at 7.30 in the evening. The one thing I didn't do was actually make a landing in that aircraft as, en route and with a load of other guys, they pushed us out the door! That flight was a bit of a blur with just an overwhelming sense of relief that I had survived. The next I made THREE such flights, two of which were from Hastings, at 6.30 and 10.30am, and the third was from a Beverley at 4pm. On the second drop that day I got the "privileged" position of "Number 1" in the stick, i.e. I was the first man out of the door. You stood with one foot on the door sill and one hand flat on the outside of the aircraft, ready to launch yourself out when the green light came on and the dispatcher tapped you on the shoulder. Some wag, with rather more experience than I, had said to me that if I ever got Number 1 in a Hastings it was worth taking a look at the tailplane, whilst waiting for the "go". I did take a look and nearly decided at that moment that I had made the wrong choice with regard to occupation: that tailplane was, more or less, level with my midriff! Whilst doing a sudden deep reassessment of my career prospects the light changed from red to green and I was in flight. Miracle of miracles, the slipstream actually throws you under the tailplane into the relative safety of the open sky. Quite a tiring couple of days and rather a lot of beer was sunk on those April evenings! -- Moving things in still pictures FastStone - Infinitely Flexible Photographic Fixing - For Free! www.FastStone.org |
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®i©ardo wrote in
: On 13/10/2010 15:44, Canuck wrote: ? "®i©ardo" wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 23:44, Canuck wrote: ? "®i©ardo" wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 01:31, Canuck wrote: ?....I think this is a Convair of some sort. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nolinor_Aviation A Convair 580. Bit of a chunky baby, that one. -- Moving things in still pictures You are correct Sir! :-) My first flight was as a wide eyed kid in a Convair 440. N. Ah, the joys of youth, eh? You bet. I was only 4 or so at the time and this was my first flight so it was quite a treat. I think everyone remembers their first flight best because it is the first. Care to share your first flight experience and what you remember? Nick Well, I started later as my first ever aircraft flight was, at the age of 19, from an RAF Handley Page Hastings, whilst on my Army parachute training course. That was on 23 April 1964 at 7.30 in the evening. The one thing I didn't do was actually make a landing in that aircraft as, en route and with a load of other guys, they pushed us out the door! That flight was a bit of a blur with just an overwhelming sense of relief that I had survived. The next I made THREE such flights, two of which were from Hastings, at 6.30 and 10.30am, and the third was from a Beverley at 4pm. On the second drop that day I got the "privileged" position of "Number 1" in the stick, i.e. I was the first man out of the door. You stood with one foot on the door sill and one hand flat on the outside of the aircraft, ready to launch yourself out when the green light came on and the dispatcher tapped you on the shoulder. Some wag, with rather more experience than I, had said to me that if I ever got Number 1 in a Hastings it was worth taking a look at the tailplane, whilst waiting for the "go". I did take a look and nearly decided at that moment that I had made the wrong choice with regard to occupation: that tailplane was, more or less, level with my midriff! Whilst doing a sudden deep reassessment of my career prospects the light changed from red to green and I was in flight. Miracle of miracles, the slipstream actually throws you under the tailplane into the relative safety of the open sky. Quite a tiring couple of days and rather a lot of beer was sunk on those April evenings! That "Hastings Exit" was likely the fastest left turn you ever made in your life. -- Andrew Chaplin SIT MIHI GLADIUS SICUT SANCTO MARTINO (If you're going to e-mail me, you'll have to get "yourfinger." out.) |
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On 14/10/2010 02:43, Andrew Chaplin wrote:
wrote in : On 13/10/2010 15:44, Canuck wrote: ? wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 23:44, Canuck wrote: ? wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 01:31, Canuck wrote: ?....I think this is a Convair of some sort. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nolinor_Aviation A Convair 580. Bit of a chunky baby, that one. -- Moving things in still pictures You are correct Sir! :-) My first flight was as a wide eyed kid in a Convair 440. N. Ah, the joys of youth, eh? You bet. I was only 4 or so at the time and this was my first flight so it was quite a treat. I think everyone remembers their first flight best because it is the first. Care to share your first flight experience and what you remember? Nick Well, I started later as my first ever aircraft flight was, at the age of 19, from an RAF Handley Page Hastings, whilst on my Army parachute training course. That was on 23 April 1964 at 7.30 in the evening. The one thing I didn't do was actually make a landing in that aircraft as, en route and with a load of other guys, they pushed us out the door! That flight was a bit of a blur with just an overwhelming sense of relief that I had survived. The next I made THREE such flights, two of which were from Hastings, at 6.30 and 10.30am, and the third was from a Beverley at 4pm. On the second drop that day I got the "privileged" position of "Number 1" in the stick, i.e. I was the first man out of the door. You stood with one foot on the door sill and one hand flat on the outside of the aircraft, ready to launch yourself out when the green light came on and the dispatcher tapped you on the shoulder. Some wag, with rather more experience than I, had said to me that if I ever got Number 1 in a Hastings it was worth taking a look at the tailplane, whilst waiting for the "go". I did take a look and nearly decided at that moment that I had made the wrong choice with regard to occupation: that tailplane was, more or less, level with my midriff! Whilst doing a sudden deep reassessment of my career prospects the light changed from red to green and I was in flight. Miracle of miracles, the slipstream actually throws you under the tailplane into the relative safety of the open sky. Quite a tiring couple of days and rather a lot of beer was sunk on those April evenings! That "Hastings Exit" was likely the fastest left turn you ever made in your life. Yes, I was a real Billy Whizzer in those far off days, left or right. -- Moving things in still pictures |
#10
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On Thu, 14 Oct 2010 09:46:10 +0100, ®i©ardo wrote:
On 14/10/2010 02:43, Andrew Chaplin wrote: wrote in : On 13/10/2010 15:44, Canuck wrote: ? wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 23:44, Canuck wrote: ? wrote in message ... On 12/10/2010 01:31, Canuck wrote: ?....I think this is a Convair of some sort. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nolinor_Aviation A Convair 580. Bit of a chunky baby, that one. -- Moving things in still pictures You are correct Sir! :-) My first flight was as a wide eyed kid in a Convair 440. N. Ah, the joys of youth, eh? You bet. I was only 4 or so at the time and this was my first flight so it was quite a treat. I think everyone remembers their first flight best because it is the first. Care to share your first flight experience and what you remember? Nick Well, I started later as my first ever aircraft flight was, at the age of 19, from an RAF Handley Page Hastings, whilst on my Army parachute training course. That was on 23 April 1964 at 7.30 in the evening. The one thing I didn't do was actually make a landing in that aircraft as, en route and with a load of other guys, they pushed us out the door! That flight was a bit of a blur with just an overwhelming sense of relief that I had survived. The next I made THREE such flights, two of which were from Hastings, at 6.30 and 10.30am, and the third was from a Beverley at 4pm. On the second drop that day I got the "privileged" position of "Number 1" in the stick, i.e. I was the first man out of the door. You stood with one foot on the door sill and one hand flat on the outside of the aircraft, ready to launch yourself out when the green light came on and the dispatcher tapped you on the shoulder. Some wag, with rather more experience than I, had said to me that if I ever got Number 1 in a Hastings it was worth taking a look at the tailplane, whilst waiting for the "go". I did take a look and nearly decided at that moment that I had made the wrong choice with regard to occupation: that tailplane was, more or less, level with my midriff! Whilst doing a sudden deep reassessment of my career prospects the light changed from red to green and I was in flight. Miracle of miracles, the slipstream actually throws you under the tailplane into the relative safety of the open sky. Quite a tiring couple of days and rather a lot of beer was sunk on those April evenings! That "Hastings Exit" was likely the fastest left turn you ever made in your life. Yes, I was a real Billy Whizzer in those far off days, left or right. I think I would have been doing a lot more than whizzing... (8)^o |
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