Large military biplane flying over Leicestershire today
Had a text my dad earlier today saying he had seen a large grey coloured biplane with RAF style roundels and large lettering, heading north over south west Leicestershire today. Does anyone know what it is likely to have been? Could only think of Fairey Swordfish or a two-seat Hawker
What, you mean build a Handley-Page V/1500? 🙂
Well said! 😀
Does anyone know when the Aeropark’s Nimrod is due to move over?
Well said Kev..
To far for me and as I see aircraft all day, a bit of a busmans holiday, we did have the Vulcan do a low pass and wing waggle at East Mids at about 5:15 though……
AM or PM? I was there, inside though so had no idea about it
Well said Kev..
To far for me and as I see aircraft all day, a bit of a busmans holiday, we did have the Vulcan do a low pass and wing waggle at East Mids at about 5:15 though……
AM or PM? I was there, inside though so had no idea about it
Glad to see the BA Museum getting some extra funds – it’s a fantastic museum and archive they have there, and the archive and the staff were great in helping me research my dissertation last year
Fantastic – what’s the motorcycle?
Great photographs, thanks for sharing them.
Whittle almost flew an E.28/39 but it was called off at the last moment (IIRC he was in the cockpit at the time). Whilst Power Jets was based at Bruntingthorpe from September 1944 (until May 1946 when it moved to Bitteswell), he would taxi the Gloster Meteor F1’s fairly often – then on 9th October 1945, without permission to, he flew Gloster Meteor F1 EE221. In his own words;
“I felt a sudden urge to do some taxying tests in the Meteor. After some 20 minutes of this I return to Whetstone, but returned to Bruntingthorpe again after lunch. After two flights in a Tiger Moth, I decided to do some more taxying tests. By this time I had acquired a familiarity with the cockpit lay out and with the feel of the aircraft up to take-off speed, and so yielded to an irresistible impulse to take off. I landed after a few minutes at very modest speeds – three days later I flew the Meteor again. This time the duration of the flight was 45 minutes and I attained much greater speeds and height than on the first occasion”
From ‘Aviation in Leicestershire and Rutland’ by Roy Bonser
Good to see I wasn’t the only one there! Sky High, there’s another open day on 11th September which hopefully will be even more popular than this past one
Yes, I think just ‘watching’ would be the answer – Hendon was of course a very busy aerodrome both pre- and during WW1, not to mention very very large
You can keep an American built aircraft on an N reg, which is advantageous to the owner for various reasons ie cost, slightly less stringent rules etc than going on your home country’s civil register. The aircraft has to be manufacturered in the USA though, whether the pilot has an American or British license makes no difference, you can put a Mustang on an N reg in the UK but you couldn’t for a Spitfire
A real shame, they had a fantastic set up – the Defiant reproduction was great, and the Overstrand forward fuselage in progress was too
A “Nazi passenger jet…” “In almost perfect condition…”
No wonder that rag has earned the soubriquet “Daily Fail”… :rolleyes:
Although it’s quite surprising they got one of their pet subjects wrong, considering it’s other soubriquet the “Daily Heil”
Museum of Army Flying were apparently going to be doing something when I was in talks with the head a while back, apart from that I haven’t heard a thing. As a member of a Great War Living History Group with a large RFC element i’d be very interested to find out anything happening where we could be involved at all
Only a Camel? Why not go the whole hog and make a replica Felixstowe F.2A to sit on the back 😎