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Papa Lima

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Viewing 15 posts - 1,876 through 1,890 (of 2,888 total)
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  • Papa Lima
    Participant

    Good question, Mark12, but I have no idea what the answer is!

    Papa Lima
    Participant

    The u/c looks like that of a Sportster, Albert, I’ll give you that! The helicopter was supposed to be a prototype, but perhaps it was never finished! Probably a home-build but using Hughes parts as much as possible.

    in reply to: Anyone else here got a Mini? #1956582
    Papa Lima
    Participant

    If you drive aout of Stamford, Lincs., south towards Wittering, there is a straight stretch of road with the wall of Lord Burleigh’s estate to your left. There is a large repaired patch in it, easily seen by the lighter shade of stonework. That’s where my Minivan ended its days in 1967, 2 days after I had bought it, with my wife at the wheel being taught to drive by me, when the nearside constant velocity joint broke. This meant that car steered itself into the wall head-on. I broke my wrist because I was holding the steering wheel at impact, and the wall was fortunately dry-stone, so it crumbled and we finished up embedded in it with everything behind the windscreen intact. Fortunately an oncoming police car had seen the whole thing and quickly established that both of us were stone cold sober. I’ve never had a Mini since then . . .

    Papa Lima
    Participant

    Inside the adjacent Reynolds Alberta Museum, and the restoration facility

    1. Curtiss JN-4 (Can) Canuck C.308, the first aircraft to fly at Edmonton. The Museum has painted its Canuck to represent a typical barnstorming aircraft of this period.
    2. Curtiss D-III?
    3. 1919 Reynolds Sports Monoplane or 1925 Reynolds Star Monoplane?

    Inside the restoration facility (not open to the general public)

    4. and 5. Dragon Rapide with original and restored sections next to each other.
    6. 1940 de Havilland D.H. 82A Tiger Moth c/n 82270 N9151 C-GABB, formerly G-AOYU in RAF wartime trainer colour scheme.
    7. Boeing Stearman Model A75N1 PT-13B Kaydet c/n 755168 serial 42-17005 marked 61046 N2S-5 (US Navy designation).
    8. Not identified – Stinson?
    9. Unidentified helicopter prototype
    I would appreciate help with the unidentified items here!

    Papa Lima
    Participant

    I apologise for the deterioration in photo quality, caused by the need to drastically reduce the files to fit into the Forum size limit!

    Papa Lima
    Participant

    The Reynolds Aviation Museum

    This is the Museum itself, which has of course a few aircraft still outside:
    1. McDonnell CF-101B Voodoo “416” in 416 Lynx Squadron markings and CF-104 Starfighter 104763 “417”.
    No. 416 Nighthawk squadron was an air defence squadron equipped with the CF-101 Voodoo interceptor. The squadron was based at CFB Chatham, New Brunswick.
    104763 was one of the early Starfighters delivered to No. 6 Strike/Reconnaissance Operational Training Unit starting on 16 January, 1962, flying out of RCAF Station Cold Lake, Alberta. On 11 March, 1968 the OTU was re-designated 417 City of Windsor Strike/Reconnaissance Operational Training Squadron. This blue, white and red paint scheme was specially prepared for the 417 Sqn Colours presentation at Cold Lake on 4 June, 1983, in recognition of the Squadron’s 25 years of active service. A month later the same aircraft and livery were used for the Colours presentation and disbandment of the squadron in 1983, by which time over 750 pilots had been trained and some 140,000 hours had been logged in the air by the 104s of 417 Squadron.
    2. General view inside the Museum. From front to rear: Replica Silver Dart (see also #230); red Beech D17S c/n 4849 CF-BKQ; 1941 Stinson Model 10 (without fabric); Canadian-built Hawker Hurricane 5418 (see also #695); Douglas DC-3 C-FIAE; 1928 American Eagle Model A-101 c/n 248 “Master of the Skies” CF-AHY; Avro Avian Mk IVM yellow biplane c/n 316 CF-CDV; North American Yale 3458.
    The DC-3 began life as a C-47-DL c/n 4563 with military serial 41-18471. It is listed as having had an accident at Somerset, Kentucky. It entered civil service in the USA as N4877V. As C-FIAE it was used as a passenger cargo carrier by Shell Oil from 1955 until 1969 when it was purchased by the Alberta Government. Alberta Air Transportation Services used the DC-3 for general duties and to fly forest fire-fighters and their supplies into remote northern areas. There are a pair of 2,000 pound thrust rocket boosters on its belly. It has also been retrofitted with the “speed package”, the most prominent feature of which is the fully enclosed undercarriage, which improved aerodynamics and increased the top speed.
    Originally owned by the Canadian Department of National Defence, Avro Avian CF-CDV was operated by the Calgary Flying Club from 1933 to 1939, and is one of only three surviving Avians.
    3. Canadian-built Hawker Hurricane Mk XII, RCAF 5418.
    4. 1936 Fleet Fawn Mk II c/n 58 RCAF 220 CF-CHF.
    5. In the foreground, the 1928 American Eagle Model A-101 c/n 248 CF-AHY with 160 hp Kinner 5-cylinder radial engine, one of only three extant. Dominating the background is the DC-3, and hanging from the ceiling is Fiberlite Products Ltd amateur-built Viking 104 glider CF-REF.
    6. From the top, Taylor Aircraft Company Piper J2 c/n 1064 CF-BEE; 1929 Curtiss-Robertson Airplane Mfg. Co. Robin C 1 painted as CF-ALZ; de Havilland D.H.87A Hornet Moth c/n 8031 CF-AYG; Travel Air 4-D c/n 1151 CF-JLW. At the right is a cream-coloured 1925 Lincoln Sport, probably C-GOXA, home-built by Maxwell A. Say.
    Piper J2 CF-BEE is noted as having been damaged in a gale at Cartierville in September 1942.
    The original Curtiss Robin CF-ALZ, c/n 405, was operated in Alberta and the North West Territories from 1930 to 1940 as a cargo and passenger bush plane. It was scrapped in 1941. The displayed similar airframe painted as CF-ALZ was imported into Canada in 1987 after service in the USA, and is the only Curtiss Robin in Canada, of the 760 built in St Louis, Missouri between 1928 and 1931.
    The Hornet Moth CF-AYG was used as a mining exploration aircraft for the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company from 1936 to 1947, operating year-round on wheels, skis and floats. It spent its entire working career in Western Canada and is one of only two surviving Hornet Moths in the world, out of 165 built. 1 pilot, 1 passenger, 130 hp, 130 mph.
    7. Avro Avian Mk IVM c/n 316 CF-CDV.
    8. Northwest Industries Ltd Bellanca 31-55A Senior Skyrocket CF-DCH, the Canadian prototype and the only complete Skyrocket remaining. 7 were built in the USA and 13 in Canada. They could be fitted with wheels, skis or floats.
    9. 1936 Fleet Fawn Mk II c/n 58 RCAF 220 CF-CHF.
    10. Canadian-built Hawker Hurricane.

    Papa Lima
    Participant

    Yes, it’s all very clean and tidy – two more batches of pix to come!

    in reply to: RCAF Vampire nose art #1400800
    Papa Lima
    Participant

    Thank you, Albert, I just hope the other information (taken from “DH Vampire – The Complete History” by David Watkins) is correct! Especially the part about Paul Mantz!

    in reply to: RCAF Vampire nose art #1400808
    Papa Lima
    Participant

    I have managed to dig out this much:
    Built in the UK at Preston, it was RAF serial VP745 and among the first batch of 85 for the RCAF, shipped to Toronto and reassembled at Downsview. After the RCAF Vampires were struck off charge in June 1958, 26 (plus 4 spares) were sold to the Formetal Division of Fliteways Inc., West Bend, Wisconsin, in 1958 for possible use in the US civil market as executive jets or fast private “hacks”. These included 17071 which was registered N6883D. Paul Mantz, the Hollywood film pilot, was known to have operated two, including 17071/N6883D.
    But the nose art question still remains!

    in reply to: Searchwater 2000 fixed wing application #2632345
    Papa Lima
    Participant

    The only picture I can see is a glum face!

    in reply to: Help, please on a pioneer replica #1401000
    Papa Lima
    Participant

    Thank you for the suggestion, TonyA, but the Museum list refers to a “Reynolds Sport Monoplane” dating from 1919 and a “Reynolds Star Monoplane” dating from 1925. It seems to me that it could be latter, the “Star” but that’s only a guess! Can anyone else throw any light on this, please?

    in reply to: Crazymainer US Navy Quiz #5 #1401650
    Papa Lima
    Participant

    Richardson seaplane

    Is this the one?

    in reply to: Help, please on a pioneer replica #1401661
    Papa Lima
    Participant

    My excellent reference is “Curtiss The Hammondsport Era 1907-1915” by Louis S Casey which shows four versions of the Model D. This one looks to me like a D.III but as I say, someone out there may know better.

    The next one here is a total mystery for me – has anyone any ideas on what it might be?

    in reply to: Quick trivia question #1402015
    Papa Lima
    Participant

    OK, my source says it was Buck Weaver, the founder of WACO. Well done, RobAnt. I read it while searching for background information on the Reynolds Museum in Alberta, Canada, and hope soon to put up a major thread covering my visit there last August. Too late, crazymainer – I put this question up in revenge for all the tricky questions you keep coming up with!

    in reply to: Quick trivia question #1402051
    Papa Lima
    Participant

    No, EN830, he was an American and his biplanes in particular became VERY famous, although they didn’t bear his name!

Viewing 15 posts - 1,876 through 1,890 (of 2,888 total)