That's the bird!
Enjoy your beer, Uli. or would you prefer a Guinness?
That's the bird!
Enjoy your beer, Uli. or would you prefer a Guinness?
both is fine
here is something that looks similar to the last plane
_
gX
that's a good investment!
enjoy your ale
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gX
A monoplane with an interesting design feature...
'interesting design feature' - hard to see from that pic.
Is that a gull-wing ?
Good eye Mike. This one had a variable wing.
The designer also built the engine as seen here.
West coast USA with flight testing taking place in early 1935. Should mention there is no Aerofile entry for it but the designer's earlier efforts are documented there.
Striking similarity to the Long Low Wing Longster, but can't find any evidence for a variable wing of what sort soever.
Leslie Long built also the Harlequin engine which should be the one displayed above.
I think ff has cracked this one - on following up I came across the link to the Popular Aviation article by Long himself.
https://books.google.com.eg/books?id...page&q&f=false
My reading is that these were two different aircraft.
You all are circling the wagons anyways. This is the Long Hi-Low Monoplane and it was equipped with the Harlequin engine. I have another photo of it with yet a different rudder shape.
Robert gets the half-pint for his efforts.
..... or is it that there was one aeroplane with three different formats - strut braced low wing monoplane, wire braced low wing monoplane and wire braced parasol wing monoplane? The photographs which illustrate the Popular Aviation article show that at least the strut braced low wing and the wire braced parasol wing monoplane bear the same number - 12776 - on the rudder.
Interesting Mike. I did not notice the same reg on the different layouts. I assumed the Hi-Low was it's own design. Maybe Les used the main fuselage to try several other ideas.
Mike, which magic word did you use to find the link to "Popular Aviation"?
Now with that article and the keyword "Hi-Low" I found yet another article:
https://books.google.de/books?id=abS...rcraft&f=false
And here's our new mystery.
Or maybe, Kevin, like the Clarke Cheetah, it was designed to have interchangeable formats. That appears to be suggested by the article that Robert found.
And Robert's latest image looks like a Farman Goliath - but it can't be as that would be too simple (and what's more, the tail feathers are wrong for that)!
That's not a Farman, Mike, this kite is not even from France.
Indeed, I think it's the Lawson C-2.
That's the bird, Mike
Over to you.
Thanks Robert - here's something smaller...another slider....
There's a minimalist reply for you ! Produced by Kjeller Flyfabrikk
Over to Chris
Going by the car in the background I would say early 1920's USA. That is all I have at the moment!
I think one needs a prophet to find this!
I thought of a Liberty engine but that turned out to be wrong.
_
gX
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