The Ongoing Mystery Aircraft Thread Part Deux. - Page 608

Thread: The Ongoing Mystery Aircraft Thread Part Deux.

  1. #15176
    Here it is again being tested by a noted woman pilot of the time. Also note a bird has been added to the fin along with some minor modifications...


  2. #15177
    Hmm, 'minor', eh? the wing's about a foot higher, and it appears to have become a 2-seater (at least) !

    Getting nowhere yet.......

  3. #15178
    Engine was changed as well as there were at least three built and all seemed to be a little different.

    The woman aviator set some distance and altitude records in the later and last design from this company which folded up by 1930.

  4. #15179
    is it linked to the Bone Golden Eagle ?

    Here is a suspicious reference:

    "Evelyn Trout’s airplane, the prototype of the Bone Golden Eagle, serial number C-801, was designed by R.O. Bone and Mark Mitchell Campbell. It was a single-place, single-engine strut-braced high-wing monoplane (“parasol”) with fixed landing gear."
    _
    gX

  5. #15180
    It is the Golden Eagle. Stout for gX!

    Aerofiles has it as the C-5 but have not seen that designation anywhere else. Have attached some further reference material if anyone is interested in the story.
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Golden Eagle Story.pdf  

  6. #15181
    Thank you Kevin. Yes, that was a vexing endeavor. I discarded the Bone Golden Eagle I knew from your first post because of the many differences.

    Meanwhile I found the answer to an open mystery which I posted here already on November 20th, 2016, 14:12: Here it is again. I think it will be identifiable now with some hints.

    Let’s try it: It is a three-seater from 1922
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails d8d8d8.jpg  
    _
    gX

  7. #15182
    Methinks this is the Rogers-Day 3-seater biplane as shown in "Aviation Week" 10/23/1922

  8. #15183
    Yes, that's her (possibly the only photo that exists)

    Funny name for an airplane, isn't it?
    _
    gX

  9. #15184
    Thanks, Uli

    Here's my next mystery, wondering how long this will last.
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails SOH-14.jpg  

  10. #15185
    British Vought V.66E Corsair

    Chris

  11. #15186
    That's the bird


    The single Vought Corsair in British colours.

    Over to you.

  12. #15187
    shouldn't be too hard.

    Chris
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails WOTMay23.jpg  

  13. #15188
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    Quote Originally Posted by cthornburg View Post
    shouldn't be too hard.

    Chris
    That's a Nationale Vliegtuig industrie NVI C-III and has something to do with Joop Carley 1922...
    Cheers
    BG (Carlo)

  14. #15189

  15. #15190
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    Hi Chtornburg
    Here goes my tonight easy offer:

    Cheers
    BG (Carlo)

  16. #15191
    Hey Carlo,

    The Czech Aero A.24. Hard to resist the big lumbering bombers of the 1920's.

    http://www.airwar.ru/image/idop/bww1...4/aero24-1.gif

  17. #15192
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    Quote Originally Posted by Moses03 View Post
    Hey Carlo,

    The Czech Aero A.24. Hard to resist the big lumbering bombers of the 1920's.

    http://www.airwar.ru/image/idop/bww1...4/aero24-1.gif
    That's her Moses (you're quite right the large continental bombers of the twenties emanate a hard to resist atmosphere!)
    Cheers
    BG (Carlo)

  18. #15193
    Thanks Carlo.

    This was the first design from a company that introduced four new aircraft all in the same year and then went out of business!


  19. #15194
    Live fast, die young?

  20. #15195
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    Hi Moses!
    I suspect a US company?
    BG (Carlo)

  21. #15196
    Not sure about the live fast part. More likely a depressed economy.


    Quote Originally Posted by Baragouin View Post
    I suspect a US company?
    Yes and from another company that was making couches, chairs and drawers prior to building aeroplanes. (They must get wholesale cost on bulk wood).

  22. #15197
    Seems nearly undestrucible...

  23. #15198
    Sounds like Mr. Four is circling the wagons. You might want to jump in on this 1929 monoplane soon!

  24. #15199
    was that name-less machine destroyed in a crash the same year?



    I think it should be the Invincible 200 1929 = 2pOM; 100hp Kinner B-5. POP: unknown, but [55N] was c/n 103.
    two side-by-side seats seem possible despite the single "head-rest fairing"
    _
    gX

  25. #15200
    It mentioned having a 110hp Kinner so I thought it might be the first one listed

    1929 = 2pOmwM; 110hp Kinner. Irl Beach. Full cantilever wing. POP: 1, destroyed in a crash in Kentucky after being sold.

    Not sure so I'm not going to split hairs. Over to gX.

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