W/NW: Those Daring Young Men in Their Flying Machines

Here, BTW, are a couple of pics of the Tow Plane for the glider...

(Oh, yes, RFF disclaimer - all these pics are dSLR's! :eek: )
 

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Early airliner service

Early airliner service

From a recent visit to the Evergreen Air Museum, McMinnville, Oregon. Now home to the "Spruce Goose". If you enjoy the history of aviation, this is an outstanding display, from the Wright Bros era to moon landing vehicles. Airplane is a Ford Trimotor and its passenger cabin. Vehicle is a very early airport shuttle bus. R2a, CV 25/4, Fuji Superia extra. Hope you enjoy. Also posted in Voigtlander forum.
Gerry
 

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Tallulah airshow Sept 2004
 

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Tallulah, La. airshow Sept. 2004
 

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We need a new slogan: RFf, for people who really know how to fly. :)

At the extrme risk of criss-crossing three topics, has anyone here seen this little cinematic promo (by IWC, of all outfits?):

http://tinyurl.com/zvz6j


- Barrett
 
Cherry Springs Airport in Cherry Springs, PA. They might be closing it soon. One of the last public grass stips.
 

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These small airports fascinate me. A few years ago, to celebrate one of my wife's "milestone" b'days we drove to a similar little airport in upstate NY state and went skydiving.

The set up was similar - a grass airstrip, old clapboard buildings plus an old barn where you hung in a harness to practice pulling on the cords to "steer" the parasail etc. We had about 2 hours of instruction for a 10 minute jump!

They took us up to abut 4000 feet in a rickety, stripped down Cessna and we each did a static line jump. We had walkie talkies strapped to us and a ground operator "guided" our landing (telling us when to pull on the right or left side of the "sail").

The "sky operator" who jumped after us (but did a free fall such that he got between me (who went first) and my wife) took a video so, alas, no still shots to post here.

Later, while removing our jumping gear we saw a newpaper article posted on the wall that told about how one of the airport's club members had just been killed when his parachute didn't open in time. Glad we saw that article AFTER the jump! :D
 
My Son!

My Son!

My son and I are both pilots. He became interested when he was a very small child when I would allow him to sit on my lap and fly the plane. He made me promis that he could start flying lessons when he turned fourteen so I had to live up to the deal. The first picture is at the end of his first solo flight. I started him in gliders and after a couple of months instruction he was ready to do the solo. His first flight was a fourty five minute flight just before sunset. At sunset his lift dropped and he made a stunning landing. He continued to build solo hours untill he turned fifteen and then he started in powered flight. On his sixteenth birthday he soloed in a 150 and got his liscense on his 17th birthday. Now he's 24 and a commecial pilot with his multi engine and instrument finishing his computer science degree and will be looking for corporate flying. The second shot was a flight we made on fathers day when he was 17. He wanted to take me up for a little trip.

excuse the crummy scans


http://www.photo.net/photos/X-Ray
 
While in the Air Force, I keep my feet firmly on the ground. Bummer - I love to fly !

Barrett, watch out for a W/NW Thread, shortly, that has quite something in common with your IWC post ;) .

On the left: seconds before landing
On the right: "Hurry up ! We're late !"
 

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As an Aero Engineer, both in the USAF and in civilian life, I have worked with the exotic craft but my flying has been limited to the tamer variety. Below are the last plane I flew before losing my Medical Certificate because of heart surgery, and a lovingly restored 1932 Great Lakes Trainer which is owned by a friend.

Jim N.
 

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Here go a few from Airfest 2006 in Fayetteville, AR - Fathers Day

Full-sized versions via clickable thumbs at:
http://nelsonfoto.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=4559

3.jpg

1.jpg

4.jpg

7.jpg

5.jpg
 
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