November 27, 2010 at 7:37 pm
I put these three old shots on another site running in a similar vain to this one but after 17 hits it did’nt seem to stir the porridge a bit:)so wonder if they’ll switch the light on here enough for anyone to stir.:rolleyes::) 

:):confused:
By: Argonaut - 16th February 2015 at 20:23
Point taken regarding the Islander, not really what I had in mind, more like this photo with nothing but British built airliners Viscounts, Vanguards, Britannia, Comet and Trident.[ATTACH=CONFIG]235372[/ATTACH]
By: garryrussell - 13th February 2015 at 15:54
The Islander is an airliner sometimes
By: Argonaut - 12th February 2015 at 18:35
[ATTACH=CONFIG]235291[/ATTACH] What a shame that no airliners are built in the UK today ( apart from pieces ) 3 great British airliners on the ramp in Dublin in the 1960s. A great pity that there is not a single Viscount flying today.
By: Argonaut - 12th February 2015 at 11:09
When was that?…the 1961 Berlin Wall crisis? great photo!
No it was 1963 during a visit by JFK, one of the C97s was called “Talking bird” and provided comms for the visit and the second was a support a/c. A huge amount of USAF aircraft visited during this period.
By: longshot - 12th February 2015 at 01:18
When was that?…the 1961 Berlin Wall crisis? great photo!
By: Argonaut - 11th February 2015 at 20:01
[ATTACH=CONFIG]235269[/ATTACH] Good to see this thread back up and running, there are so many great images in it. My contribution this evening is an Aer Lingus Viscount at Dublin, with some “interesting” background.
By: mike currill - 11th February 2015 at 13:47
I’ve just noticed that there is a British Eagle 1-11 among the earlier pics. I remember them doing the UK-BAOR air trooping in the mid 60’s before Brittania took over. I flew on a few of those.
Nice to see a pic of the world’s first turboprop airliner type in the colours of a modern airline.
By: HP81 - 11th February 2015 at 09:27
I remember G-BLFJ operating out of Stansted, it wasn’t quite as easy to maintain as the -200’s, due to some of the nacelle panels being screwed on rather than quick release. An Air UK rep told me that they kept it in the fleet because their engineers had rescued it from the jungle, after being told, when they were collecting some other F27’s, that if they recovered this aircraft they could have it for nothing. I am not sure how true this is but it’s a good story.
Sorry about the van in this picture, it was taken to put on the wall in the Qualitair line office.
By: garryrussell - 10th February 2015 at 19:25
Air UK F.27-100
Air Anglia were building the fleet at a time when the type was at it’s most popular and -200 were hard to get. So they bought two -100 to convert to -200
G-STAN was done but G-SPUD was found to be unsuitable and not done. It spent the remainder of it’s life as the owners sole -100
When Manx Airlines was formed by Air UK (as AA and BIA had become), and BMA, G-SPUD was sent as a part of the initial fleet becoming G-OMAN. Later, it re-joined the main Air UK fleet as G-BLFJ. Affectionately known as ‘Fruit Juice’ it was very popular with cabin crew as the lower powered Darts were quieter than the rest of the fleet.
It was cancelled withdrawn from use 6th January 1997
By: mike currill - 30th August 2014 at 23:46
I bet the backdrop has changed considerably since that was taken.
By: Argonaut - 30th August 2014 at 22:22
[ATTACH=CONFIG]231376[/ATTACH] Southend 1969
By: mike currill - 23rd July 2014 at 12:32
OK JB, glad that is sorted. Most magazines are nice enough to ask before they use a picture, and I could’t remember this one. When you mentioned Newcastle
I was even more surprised since with the KLM DC8 and DC9 in the background this is an Amsterdam picture.
The Interflug IL62 is also at my homeport Schiphol were they were sometimes seen.
Nice picture HP, I can see the guy under tail is working to influence the horizon.The following pictures were taken at Rotterdam, scanned and processed some time ago with some heavyhanded noise reduction.
rgds
EC
Britannia Airways 737s, I flew enough miles in those flying to and from Germany. Flying between Gutersloh and Gatwick.
By: Anecdotage - 26th June 2014 at 18:47
Better late than never; I’ve just stumbled upon this forum… G-STAN was one of two F27-100 aircraft in our fleet, but they were not identical. G-STAN (c/n 10131) was registered to us on the 30th of April 1979 and, previously, was VH-CAV with the Australian Department of Civil Aviation. The out-of-sequence British registration honoured Air Anglia’s Engineering Manager, whose surname I now forget. The aircraft had Dart 528-7E engines but, if my memory serves me correctly, it was re-engined with Dart 532-7Rs as with the F27-200s in the fleet. The other -100 was G-SPUD (c/n 10120), named after Philip ‘Spud’ Murphy, our Operations Manager and Chief Pilot. Sourced also from Australia (as VH-TFE), this aircraft was registered to us on the 31st of January 1979. I can certainly vouch for the care needed with loadsheets for these aircraft and remember an occasion when, while loading pax at ABZ for a mid-day schedule (AQ205, I think, ABZ-MME-HUY-NWI-LHR), the engineers saw daylight under the nosewheel, which caused some alarm and the permanent institution thereafter of trickle-boarding to fill the forward seating first. Performance was good and, on a hot day, the addition of five gallons of Water/Methanol to the fuel during take-off would lift a full G-SPUD into the air with alacrity.
If memory serves, that Air UK F27 G-STAN was the only -100 in the fleet. This meant taking care with the loadsheets for it, as the standard weights were unique. The other F27s were -200s, although I think that there was a -500 or -600 also. I can also remember ‘ramping’ an Air UK F28, PH-MOL in a predominantly white Air UK scheme.
By: Culpano - 14th September 2013 at 00:59
Great stuff groundhugger. Love these old shots. Way before my time.
By: mkidston - 31st July 2013 at 11:50
Yes, I remember the AEI ’44s. There used to be an engineer who’s surname was Baines, and an English guy called Tony who seemed to be their station ‘rep’ Ridiculous that I can remember the surname of one and only the christian name of the other. I’m not sure if Mr Baines was an ATEL guy, or just employed by AEI. I think that around about the same time, we were also looking after Tradewinds with their STN based 707, along with Scimitar, also with a 707. A couple of us Servisair traffic guys had a transatlantic round trip, courtesy of the Scimitar crews. I can’t imagine it would be allowed now.
Yes it was Dave Baines, the other was Tony Kidston (My Dad) he was operations manager at Staines. I came along later in ’85 working nights . I “fondly”:rolleyes: remember rushing to knock up 10 x 88 inch contoured pallets (tip . for the ideal contouor, stand at the centre of the pallet raise your right arm and sweep it in an arc, now say “That’ll fit” 😀 ) and a load of loose for the tail section on Tuesday and Saturday nights for the next day departures. (think we had moved to Manston then). Also, I have a vague recollection as a sproglet of being dragged down to lydd for a BAF charter in about ’72 and various other places at sill times of a weekend. Guess that was the lot of the oldest child of a Freight man 🙂 must have worked.. I did 15 years at AEI then 8 at MP..
By: Peter de Zeeuw - 14th June 2013 at 09:22
Good morning,
Here are a few more from La Guardia. They were all taken through windows on August 5th, 1986.
1. N173RA: De Havilland Canada DHC-7, Ransome
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2. N1066T: Douglas DC-9-15, Midway Metrolink
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3. N614DL: Boeing 757-232, Delta
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4. N407BN: Boeing 727-291, World
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5. N924: Namc YS-11, PBA
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6. EI-BJP: Boeing 737-275, Presidential Airways
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7. N469BN: Boeing 727-227, Braniff
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Kind regards,
Peter
By: Peter de Zeeuw - 27th May 2013 at 14:54
Good afternoon,
Here are some slide scans, taken at La Guardia on August 5th, 1986. They were all taken through windows.
1. N3309L: Douglas DC-9-15, Republic
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2. N934ML: Douglas DC-9-31, Midway Metrolink
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3. N107AC: DHC-6-300, Allegheny Commuter
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4. N330AU: Boeing 737-2B7, US Airways
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5. N610TW: Boeing 767-231ER, TWA
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6. N808BE: Beech 1900C, Business Express
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7. N783NC: Douglas DC-9-51, Republic
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8. N141PM: Fokker F-27-200, Business Express.
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More next time.
Kind regards,
Peter
By: by738 - 22nd May 2013 at 00:07
Remember seeing the NW 747 at PIK. Very nostalgic