Roberto Renauld
Member
North American P-51D, and North American F-86 Saber!!!!, Excellent Fighters and fighter bombers too!!!!...
Regards
Roberto
Regards
Roberto
Over 3,300 Typhoons were made. They think 25 were lost due to the tail failure.
Pulling up out of a power dive (common for a ground attack airplane) with a 2,200 hp engine in your nose, will structurally test every component.
After the war the Hawker Typhoon evolved into the Sea Fury. It was a successful design after the war, and made in large numbers (by British post-war standards). It flew in Korea and had a long service career with a dozen foreign Air Forces. Soldiering on into the 1960's.
The Sea Fury had the excellent Bristol Centaurus 2,500 hp 18-cylinder twin-row radial sleeve value engine. It's round shape gave the Sea Fury a slightly different profile as compared to the Typhoon. The Typhoon had a H-24 engine, which was basically four inline 6-cylinder banks in a cross shape.
There are at least a couple of Hawker Sea Furys still flying today.....
click to enlarge
I wanted to make another thread with just cool factor so I could point out the Stuka. They are like Lugers, easily recognizable even at distance. They had an auto recovery system in case the pilot blacked out. Just the appearance and those 'Jericho Trunpet' sirens they put on the landing gear shrouds made it a true 'terror weapon'. Something that you would not want to see coming in your direction.
Well, technically Roland Garros was firing through the propeller, but that was not a production plane, but a field modification. He was the first to be called an ace.Prior to this, everybody was just taking pot shots from the side or firing over the propeller.
As a pilot, one in-flight separation is way to many, just bad for business, and no pilot should have to worry about his ride "coming apart", so just bad JU-JU bwana!
Now as to the very lovely Hawker Sea Fury with its contra-rotating props, now THAT is aero=nautic loveliness all rolled into a kool sounding ride. In the old days, the in-imitable Frank Saunders, with his Hawker Sea Fury, equipped with wing tip vortex smoke generators put on an airshow that made the whole of Oshkosh sit up and take notice. In fact, the Sea Fury gives the lovely Mustang a real challenge for first place in WW-II era aircraft, though I have a very soft spot in my heart for the Spitfire??
Bf-109F series. But I must admit liking the P40 with the shark's teeth.
"We heard the high speed run of an engine driven aircraft but could not see it until he came out of his dive and levelled off flying away from us. He came out of the sun, and after levelling off gave us a friendly wag of his wings flying off to parts unknown. It was unmistakably a P51 and one of the guys on the boat speculated that it could be Prime Minister Ki as he was an airforce pilot with a ton of money and influence. Its possible that we were one of the last military boats in a war zone to be buzzed by a P-51."
I don't think that the South Vietnamese Air Force ever operated the P-51. They had the Grumman F-8 Bearcat and then the Douglas A-1 Skyraider.
That's my second favorite American inter-war biplane.
The F4Bs are more attractive, lacking the excessively long headrest/fuselage hump of the P-12.
Here are another couple of my favorites:
Nakajima A4N1: Similar in concept to the Boeing F4B.
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Polikarpov I-15:
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Speaking of old school, back in 1989 I had the absolute privilege of interviewing the last three surviving WWI American Aces. Then all in their nineties they are all gone now. What so impressed me about these gentleman is they way in which they relived each experience as if it happened yesterday. So vivid was their description of events each seem to transcend black and white video reals and pictures of a distant past as if to give color to speech.
It's no Nova or Ken Burns caliber of film making but for those who might be interested it is my honor to present this to you. It runs just over 26 minutes. We cut out the commercials. If you can, just listen to the gentleman who flew these planes, made of cloth, wood, and wire. Truly brave men. The honor of my life.
WW1 American Aces Interviews/Documentary 1989: Ace's High - YouTube
Speaking of old school, back in 1989 I had the absolute privilege of interviewing the last three surviving WWI American Aces. Then all in their nineties they are all gone now. What so impressed me about these gentleman is they way in which they relived each experience as if it happened yesterday. So vivid was their description of events each seem to transcend black and white video reals and pictures of a distant past as if to give color to speech.
It's no Nova or Ken Burns caliber of film making but for those who might be interested it is my honor to present this to you. It runs just over 26 minutes. We cut out the commercials. If you can, just listen to the gentleman who flew these planes, made of cloth, wood, and wire. Truly brave men. The honor of my life.
WW1 American Aces Interviews/Documentary 1989: Ace's High - YouTube
Wonderful piece! Not to be missed. Thank you Gulfecho.
I believe that one is the I-16 PolikarpovIs this is a Polikarpov I-15? It's on display at the CAF msuuem in Midland, TX.
What a terrific little movie! I enjoyed it a great deal.![]()
It's an I-16, at the time of introduction, the most techologically advanced fighter in the world.Is this is a Polikarpov I-15? It's on display at the CAF msuuem in Midland, TX.
Then you should stay away from all high performance fighters, since virtually everyone had teething problems in the beginning resulting in the loss of airframes and life. Especially, those hurriedly developed, rushed to production, and built entirely during war time.As a pilot, one in-flight separation is way to many, just bad for business, and no pilot should have to worry about his ride "coming apart"....