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Flying-A

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Viewing 15 posts - 226 through 240 (of 432 total)
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  • in reply to: Man runs along tarmac at Melb Airport #553435
    Flying-A
    Participant

    Reminds me of this story about somebody who tried to hitch a ride on the outside of an NWA commuter flight from Paducah, Kentucky, to Memphis, Tennessee:

    http://www.wfn.org/1999/08/msg00053.html

    in reply to: Interesting helicopter fact #1152754
    Flying-A
    Participant

    Sikorsky preferred to pronounce helicopter as ‘heelicopter’

    One hears that pronunciation in a number of movies from the forties and fifties. It makes sense when you consider that the “heli” in helicopter comes from “helix”, pronounced “heelix”. Based on movies and TV shows, the pronunciation “hellacopter” seems to have become the norm by the mid-fifties, although I heard Jimmy Doolittle use “heelacopter” in an interview in the seventies.

    But the old pronunciation lives on in the USN, in which the word “helo” is pronounced “heelo”.

    in reply to: Sea Hawk question #1157132
    Flying-A
    Participant

    What’s with the hole in the nose? Towing attachment for use as a glider?

    To me, the Sea Hawk’s lines always seemed more like a sailplane’s than a fighter’s.

    in reply to: Helicopter above 10 Downing street #422317
    Flying-A
    Participant

    Maybe it was shot from one of those little RC choppers!

    in reply to: General Discussion #300212
    Flying-A
    Participant

    On your link, in that screenshot of It’s a MMMMW….who was the woman in the middle. I recall she played a fantastic nagging wife that went on and on and on and on.

    That’s Broadway legend Ethel Merman. She was married to Continental Airlines CEO Robert Six for several years in the fifties. After their divorce, he married actress Audrey Meadows, who had earlier played Alice on the comedy series The Honeymooners. The union lasted until Six’s death in 1986.

    in reply to: Dorothy Provine, RIP #1891061
    Flying-A
    Participant

    On your link, in that screenshot of It’s a MMMMW….who was the woman in the middle. I recall she played a fantastic nagging wife that went on and on and on and on.

    That’s Broadway legend Ethel Merman. She was married to Continental Airlines CEO Robert Six for several years in the fifties. After their divorce, he married actress Audrey Meadows, who had earlier played Alice on the comedy series The Honeymooners. The union lasted until Six’s death in 1986.

    in reply to: Sud Aviation Caravelle #1096312
    Flying-A
    Participant

    According to a caption in the book The Jet Age by Robert Serling, the triangular design was to maximize the passenger’s view downward while minimizing stress on the fuselage around the window.

    in reply to: Doolittle Raid #1110708
    Flying-A
    Participant

    Thanks for the reminder. Today, I happened to open a mailing from the Pacific Aviation Museum that to my pleasant surprise included several large photographs of the raid. Maybe there are no coincidences after all….

    in reply to: Plane I.D. help #1139407
    Flying-A
    Participant

    The MO-1 is a great favorite of model aviators is control-line carrier events.

    in reply to: General Discussion #316000
    Flying-A
    Participant

    The Congressional staffers who wrote the Obamacare bill exempted themselves from it:

    http://newledger.com/2010/03/exempted-from-obamacare-senior-staff-who-wrote-the-bill/

    That’s proof enough for me that it’s a stinker.

    in reply to: US Health Reform (at last) #1900363
    Flying-A
    Participant

    The Congressional staffers who wrote the Obamacare bill exempted themselves from it:

    http://newledger.com/2010/03/exempted-from-obamacare-senior-staff-who-wrote-the-bill/

    That’s proof enough for me that it’s a stinker.

    in reply to: KC-X round 3 FINAL RFP #2421180
    Flying-A
    Participant

    A new twist:

    Russian company expected to bid on Air Force refueling tanker

    By Mike Mount, CNN Senior Pentagon Producer

    March 20, 2010 — Updated 0245 GMT (1045 HKT)

    Washington (CNN) —

    A new twist in the Air Force’s 10-year effort to build an aerial refueling tanker may bring a bid from a Russian state-owned aerospace company for the $35 billion tanker contract, according to the company’s U.S. attorney.

    The company, United Aircraft Corporation will create a joint venture between a still to be announced U.S. contract company and UAC-America, according to John C. Kirkland, a Los Angeles, California-based lawyer representing UAC. Kirkland would not identify the American partner.

    “The Russians spoke with Hillary Clinton today about it,” Kirkland said.

    While no mention was made of the tanker bid by either Secretary of State Clinton or Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin when they met Friday, Putin did urge greater access for Russian companies in the U.S. market.

    “As far as our economic cooperation is concerned, certainly our major companies are very much interested in such a cooperation and they’re expecting us to support them,” Putin said to Clinton. “A message should be sent that they are welcome both in the economy of the United States and of Russia.”

    “We would very much like to get into specifics about how to remove barriers and open opportunities,” replied Clinton.

    The Russian-American joint venture would be based in Los Angeles, Kirkland said, but he said the aircraft could be built anywhere in the country.

    Kirkland said the aircraft the company would put forward is based on the Russian Ilyushin Il-96, a four-engine commercial airliner.

    Also on Friday, European aircraft maker EADS said it remains interested in bidding the tanker contract despite its U.S. partner, Northrop-Grumman, dropping out of the competition earlier this month.

    “Yesterday the U.S. Department of Defense indicated it would welcome a proposal from EADS North America as prime contractor for the KC-X tanker competition,” EADS said Friday.

    “This is a significant development. EADS is assessing this new situation to determine if the company can feasibly submit a responsive proposal to the department’s request for proposal,” the company said.

    Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said the Department of Defense has received a request by EADS to extend the time to submit a proposal by 90 days.

    “The department is considering it,” Whitman said.

    Until Friday’s announcement, Boeing was the only company to bid on the contract.

    Northrop and European partner EADS, the parent company of Airbus, originally won the contract in February 2008, but a protest by Boeing reversed that decision, forcing the Air Force to change the requirements for the plane. Northrop dropped its bid on March 8.

    in reply to: A400 "rescue" deal moves closer #2431389
    Flying-A
    Participant

    Do you seriously think DoD would go to Congress and tell them they want to close down the C-17 line, but could we please have money to go out and buy a foreign airlifter that competes with it on the world market?

    Given the current economic and political climate, such a proposal would be so obviously doomed that either SecDef or the White House would drop the idea before even got to Congress.

    in reply to: General Discussion #338817
    Flying-A
    Participant

    Roberts played Adam…..until the end of the ‘64-65 season.

    “Lady Luck smiled on him — and he kicked her in the teeth.” — Hollywood’s reaction.

    in reply to: Vale Pernell Roberts #1912729
    Flying-A
    Participant

    Roberts played Adam…..until the end of the ‘64-65 season.

    “Lady Luck smiled on him — and he kicked her in the teeth.” — Hollywood’s reaction.

Viewing 15 posts - 226 through 240 (of 432 total)