Try this.
You have to keep the spell checkers away from the Christmas cheer. By the way, the last post was the Curtis XP-10 I believe’
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Beats me on the horses, but the aeroplane is the Hamilton H 47; the picture was taken at Pembina, N.D., in the winter of 1936 and is a Northwest Airlines machine. Registration is NC something; the posted picture was “adjusted” somewhat. Chris is up next.
Merry Christmas to everyone.
I think the aeroplane. But horse lovers are welcome to join in.
It does look like it – but the identification I have is of a different machine, and I don’t know of any relation to Canada.
They are not reindeer, but this is as Christmasy as I could find.
Right except for the pilot. The picture (a different version) comes with the information “Army flier on air jaunt. Photo shows Lt. G.S. Haberle, beside the bullet-like monoplane he will fly on a transcontinental flight from Quincy MA to San Diego CA to join the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Lexington. The plane, a British fighting-type model, was rebuilt at the Squantum Airport, from which he takes off November 1. 11-1-29.”
I have no idea if he actually did it.
Yours. John.
dhc – I know the forum you are referring to – a complete shambles. But here is the next one. The pilot can be identified too.
Everyone can participate, the rules are not particularly onerous. And the machine is Japanese – Kawanishi K-10 I think.
My guess would be that it is in the War Relicts Museum, Saigon – partly based on the filename.
Yes- you have it, Moze.
It is a relative; higher number.
Not M-S. closer to the beginning of the alphabet. Some of their bigger machines were better known.
It was French.
I think I got it the first time, so let (the other) Canuck take it.