Vintage Aircraft

@Sparrow...exactly...they were like kites with humans in them.

I'll take my 737 any day! :)

... max windspeed one can taxi a tiger moth 13 knots, but it would be a brave man doing it ...

... without power though, I'd rather be in one than a 737 ... what's the glide-ratio for the Bowing? 1:15 at a couple of hundred knots, whereas the moth can't keep up with the traffic on the M5 in a headwind, with the engine running, in some other respects the Bowing probably has the edge :D

... the heater springs to mind
 
That plane was still climbing when it lost power in the engines. It did make a more or less controlled landing in the Hudson. It couldn't glide to Teterboro airport due to lack of altitude, not of lack of gliding power. This story also proves my point that modern planes aren't bricks.

That barn door might be a correct description btw :D
 
16902333258_bc39dda69a_h.jpg
 
Here are a couple of antiques. Me with my uncle's 1947 Cessna 120. The picture was taken in the late 1960's with my Bolsey B2 rangefinder. Anscochrome slide which had deteriorated so scanned and cropped.Cessna120.jpg
 
Back
Top Bottom