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What is your favorite aircraft of all time?

Flieger

Practically Family
Messages
570
Location
Umea, Sweden
Fletch said:
Flieger, surprised you skipped the Seversky/Republic P-35, which served with both the Swedish and US forces...

Well Fletch, I skipped MANY favourite aircraft on that list. Some, because they where already mentioned in detail here on the forum, and others, because... well, it just wouldn't be interesting to the crowd to hear about my fetiches. :D

The P-35A, that we used in Sweden (slightly longer airframe) was a fine aircraft that did its job running neutral watch during WWII. Sweden recived 60 aircraft out of 120 ordered before the embargo clamped down. The remaining 60 where used in the Phillipines (some still bearing SwAf-markings), where they as you already stated did less then perfect against the Japanese Zeros. I shudder to think what had happened had Hitler tured his eyes on Sweden. We had nothing back then to dogfight Messerschmitts or shoot down bombers.

Ahh... historic aviation... :)

/Flieger
 

Warden

One Too Many
Messages
1,336
Location
UK
I have always had a soft spot for early WW2 equipment.

When it comes to aircraft I like the Fairy Battle

bat.jpg


Handley-Page Hampden

Packaging43.jpg


As for all time favourite aircraft, the Avro Vulcan. I saw this plane fly at an airshow just before the RAF retired them.

avro_vulcan_01_01.jpg


Harry
 
Warden said:
As for all time favourite aircraft, the Avro Vulcan. I saw this plane fly at an airshow just before the RAF retired them.

avro_vulcan_01_01.jpg
You have good taste, sir. The Vulcan was love at first sight for me, too--rather than scrap 'em, why didn't you sell 'em to us? They woulda made good escorts for the B-52s...

*secretly jealous of the group restoring XH558 to fly again, wanting one of those birds in flyable condition for myself--or the engineering diagrams to start redesigning and updating it...*
 

Smithy

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,139
Location
Norway
Warden said:
the Fairy Battle

bat.jpg

I've liked the lines of the Battle as well, but good grief those poor buggers who had to fly them in the Battle of France. Being on a Battle squadron was almost a death sentence then.
 

eniksleestack

One of the Regulars
Messages
114
Location
Santa Barbara, CA
Diamondback said:
I have almost no passions, but the B-52 is a deep one--with a couple exceptions, that bird I got to park myself aboard in Kansas is about the closest emotional attachment I've ever had.

Hey Diamondback, did you fly the Big Ugly Fat "Fellows"? Sounds like maybe you did. My dad was a radar nav/ bombardier/weapons officer on those beauties (esp. the tall tails) from 1973-1988.
 
eniksleestack said:
Hey Diamondback, did you fly the Big Ugly Fat "Fellows"? Sounds like maybe you did. My dad was a radar nav/ bombardier/weapons officer on those beauties (esp. the tall tails) from 1973-1988.
Sir, I did not, but the BUFF has been an interest since childhood. Blame Dale Brown... (Although my grandfather, before he did his USAFE tour or time with the 318th, was part of a BUFF wing at Westover--heard a lot about the "tall tail" days from him.)

Wanted to, but my prescription wouldn't even let me fly as a loadmaster on a cargo plane, let alone "command pilot"--my "pilot's seat time" was with 55-094 parked in the Kansas Aviation Museum. So, no flying and no combat=no Air Force for me!

Maybe in a past life, but not in this one, outside a simulator.:(
 

Warden

One Too Many
Messages
1,336
Location
UK
Do agree Smithy, like so much so early war equipment the Battle was an awful plane in combat. But was a good looking of the plane.

As for Avro Vulcan, Diamondback is right its a VERY good looking plane. Strange that this 1950s plane is simular in shape to the Eurofighter, looks like the boffins in the 1950s with thier slide rules and hand drawn plans where ahead of the 2000 boffins with the computers.

Harry
 

Jerekson

One Too Many
Messages
1,615
Location
1935
The Wingnut said:
062_3857w5.jpg


Macchi-Castoldi MC.72. 3000 hp Fiat AS.6 V-24, 443 mph seaplane IN 1934! Imagine what this thing would have done without the floats!

Wingnut,

Can you explain this a bit more to me? This thing did 443mph in 1934?!?

How is this possible, if Howie set the 1935 record at 235mph?

Perhaps it's the seaplane aspect?

Please elaborate to me, because this is very interesting indeed.

It looks like I have a date with Wikipedia, in the meantime...;)
 

Jerekson

One Too Many
Messages
1,615
Location
1935
Diamondback said:
Different "course", sir. Hughes was going for an endurance run, a transcon. This bird was designed for a "dash", not a "sustained speed"--all the Schneider Cup contestants were seaplanes with high speeds and short ranges.

Well, that would explain a bit. :)

But regardless, it just doesn't seem right that it would work like that. To me, anyway.
 
Jerekson said:
But regardless, it just doesn't seem right that it would work like that. To me, anyway.

Simple, sir. The Hughes Racer had to pack a lotta fuel for its trip, while your typical Schneider racer was built like a Gee Bee--the biggest darn engine the builder could lay his hands on, with just enough wing to keep it up and enough fuel tank to keep it running through a short race. Much higher power-to-weight ratio.
 

Dixon Cannon

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,157
Location
Sonoran Desert Hideaway
Smithy said:
Talking of racing aircraft, I have always thought the DH.88 Comet an absolute beauty

01shut09.JPG

Correct me if I off base; but do you see the beginnings of the Messerschmitt Me-262 silhouette in DH design? I've always thought so!

-dixon cannon
 

Smithy

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,139
Location
Norway
I can see what you mean Dixon, there really are some similarities, although the Comet's grandchild was the Mossie.
 

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