Hello boys and girls!
She has a vague likeness to the Twin Mooney (Mark 22?)....
Cheers
BG
Hello boys and girls!
She has a vague likeness to the Twin Mooney (Mark 22?)....
Cheers
BG
But, BG, I think she's the Baumann Brigadier...
Over to Scotland on the crumpled Brigadier.
Said it crashed on Jan. 8, 1953. I assume repaired. Pixs of it in 1970 and reported went to a museum EAA I think.
Chris
Here's another twin whose pilot remembered (a) to land on a runway and (b) to lower the gear !
An early SFERMA SF-60 Marquis? By which I mean, I suppose, the original SFERMA Turbo Travel Air.
Indeed, ph, it is number 01, F-WJHC, Turbo Travel Air.
Thank you, Lefty. The Astazous were the giveaways. I'll now try to find something interesting with which to reciprocate. In the meantime, a happy new year to all.
p.s. if anyone can suggest why, despite being subscribed to this thread by way of instant e-mail notification, I'm receiving no notifications whatsoever, I'll be much obliged to them.
Thank you, Kevin. I am both obliged and informed. Working 'on manual' does keep one on one's toes.
Knowing PH's fondness for obscure pre-war French aeroplanes...
I had already 'flipped' the photo and found the print showing through to be in French ! Not that that has helped............
Yes, this one's French but not as obscure as you seem to think. Indeed you'll find pictures of it on the internet - although that which I've posted is the only one I've seen with the particular rudder illustrated.
I thought the rudder had a Farmanesque look to it but I don't think it is one.
No, not a Farman. Twenty four years later its designer engineered another very different aeroplane that's only recently flown for the first time.
Intel i9-13900 Raptor Lake , Be Quiet! Dark rock slim cooler, 32 Gb Corsair DDR5 RAM, MSI Z790 Tomahawk motherboard, Asus RTX 4060Ti 16Gb, Thermaltake 1050 Watt PSU, Windows 11 64-bit 1 m2, 4 SSD, 2 HDD.
A nice piece of reverse deduction, sir. It is Louis de Monge's 'live wing' (is it true that he braced it with knicker elastic?) monoplane of 1914. In every other photograph of it, that I have seen, it has a more traditional - for the period - rudder, which is a linear continuation of the fin (rendering the sum a triangle). Presumably the original gave insufficient directional control and thus the slab in the photograph was substituted for it?
According to the great book by Jaap Horst about the 100P the rudder was replaced during testing but no reason is given. Apparently it did fly very well, even when flying through a storm. No mention on the origin of the rubber bands though!
I see some '100P' in this next mystery:
Intel i9-13900 Raptor Lake , Be Quiet! Dark rock slim cooler, 32 Gb Corsair DDR5 RAM, MSI Z790 Tomahawk motherboard, Asus RTX 4060Ti 16Gb, Thermaltake 1050 Watt PSU, Windows 11 64-bit 1 m2, 4 SSD, 2 HDD.
The He-119V2 it is indeed: Over to Italy!
Intel i9-13900 Raptor Lake , Be Quiet! Dark rock slim cooler, 32 Gb Corsair DDR5 RAM, MSI Z790 Tomahawk motherboard, Asus RTX 4060Ti 16Gb, Thermaltake 1050 Watt PSU, Windows 11 64-bit 1 m2, 4 SSD, 2 HDD.
Thanks Ferry vO!
I hope this hasn't been posted yet (sorry for the grainy pick).....
Cheers
BG
BG's grainy geisha is a Kawasaki Type 88-1, methinks.
Time for our first floater of the year -
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