I got it after the previous clue but don't want to post as I am a bit tied up today. Come on Uli ! Pluck that harp !
I got it after the previous clue but don't want to post as I am a bit tied up today. Come on Uli ! Pluck that harp !
After all those clues this should be the Harper 1-A, however couldn't find a photo of it.
Kevin or Uli, since both of you seem to have found photographic proof of this bird, would anybody of you mind to tell the source of that mystery?
EAA Vintage Airplane 11-87
_
gX
I hope, Kevin doesn't mind when I'm going on with the next mystery.
Hi fabulousfour
Me thinks of the HØNNINGSTAD-WIDERØE C-5 POLAR (LN-DBW) from Norway, with the later cowling type.
Nothing more to add, Walter.
Well done!
This one is pretty new and from, maybe, a unexpected country.
Although mainly white, the construction is all-metal
She is from a European country.
The designer and his team/company earlier produced a couple of single and two-seaters, all low-wingers with conventional tailwheel u/c.
Here is another picture.
The aircraft is the FC-4 (alias M-540) by Flight Constructoive Ltd from Bulgaria. Company of designer Alexander Marinossian.
Earlier projects of him included the M-235 Etude (3 versions all registered as LZ-MAR), M-320 Agent (2 built to-date).
Open House, please
all I know about this is country and designation. couldn't find anything else on web.
Chris
I think I've seen that one before.
If I remember correctly that tiny plane is somewhere from the Balkans, but that's all I can remember/find at the moment.
For those that don't know it, it's European.
Chris
Looks very Ambrosini, but it ain't - fin too angular.
Eureka, I have it.
The Micik Mimi-2-SS from Slovakia, nearby the Balkans.
Here are some more pictures:
https://www.gonzoaviation.com/clanok/mimi-2ss
I even had saved that homepage as a favorite somewhen, but didn't remember it until now.
For those interested, I could decipher some technical data of this rarity:
Span 5.4 m, length 4.8 m, engine a Walter Mikron with 60 hp.
Just when I think I found a stumper. Over to you good going.
Chris
Thanks, Chris.
Here is another mystery.
That, Robert, looks like the Paul Schmitt P.S.7.
Somehow, that gentleman at the front is unmistakeably French !
It is the PS.7, Mike!
That kite must have had really built-in drag with 6 (!) pairs of struts on each side...
Over to Scotland.
Hi Mike
She is the GCA-3 Etabeta and a sister of the Pedro and the final design of G.C.A.
Registration I-RAIF
To start with a hint: Not American
European country and at least 2 built.
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