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Posts posted by nuuumannn
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Might make an interesting subject for an adventurous modeller to tackle, the colour scheme is colourful enough to make it look interesting.
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Hi Guys, during a trip to Argentina a few years ago I gota guided tour around TA-05, which the Argentine Air Force fitted with a Turbomeca marbore from a Morane Saulnier Paris. The aircraft was used during antarctic flights and crossed the continent in the late 60s, from Arhgentine territory to Scott Base.
The intake for the jet was on the dorsal fin where the yellow warning is written. Note that the hori stab has additional strengthening and the control surfaces are metal rather than fabric.
The crude nature of the conversion can be seen in the exhaust and bracing structure.
Fuel tanks fill the entire cabin, restricting its useful load.
The flight deck betrays a few differences from the standard C-47.
Ducting for the intake and location of the engine.
More images here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/147661871@N04/albums/72157713087827148/with/49527378383/
Thanks for looking.
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Living in New Zealand means getting to Somerset isn't so easy, although I did live in the UK for 10 years a while back, I never went to Bovington while I was there.
On 8/28/2018 at 6:19 AM, Rodders154 said:I live in Yeovil and as such I have the FAA museum 10 minutes away. The Tank Museum 49 minutes away and the helicopter Museum less than an hour away
Come and live in Yeovil if you like modelling.
On my last trip in 2018 I stayed in South Petherton, which was nice. On the day I went to Bovington I drove round looking at sites related to T.E. Lawrence, his grave, site of his bike accident and his wee cottage up the road from Bovington, then drove to Goodwood and watched some aeroplanes flying and cars doing the rounds on the track, then to Eastleigh, Southampton before arriving in Kent where I was staying the next night. I need to put my Yeovilton images up; we got into the Cobham Hall.
2806 T.E.Lawrence's motorcycle
2806 T.E. Lawrence's house Clouds Hill
2806 T.E. Lawrence's death site
2706 RNAS Yeovilton Gate Guard
Here's a photographic record of my UK trip two years ago, in case you are interested.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/147661871@N04/albums/72157671846190398/with/43935352561/
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Hi, images from the Italian military aviation museum on the shore of Lake Bracchiano, north of Rome. Although in the region of the village of Vigna di Valle, it is located on the lake shore and is equidistant in the opposite direction to the town of Bracchiano.
This site is quite historic and was one of the first landing grounds in Italy, for airships and balloons, becoming a seaplane base as well, where, during WW2 this enormous crane was used to hoist flying boats and floatplanes out of the lake. Grumman Albatri were based here for SAR duties.
The waterfront flying boat park and jetty, with watch tower.
Barchina Idroplano hydrofoil driven by an aircraft engine.
Captured Austro-Hungarian Lohner flying boat, with SPAD VII, Macchi-Hanriot HD.1 and Ansaldo SVA behind.
Caproni Ca.36.
Schneider Trophy winning Macchi M.39.
World Speed Record holding Macchi MC.72.
The MC.72's Fiat AS.6 V-24 engine.
IMAM Ro.37 found in Afghanistan and rerstored.
Fiat CR.42.
Caproni Campini CC.2 hydrid jet. Its compressor, seen below it was driven by a piston engine.
There are three of Mario Castoldi's fighter designs on display in the museum; Macchi MC.202.
Macchi MC.200.
Savoia Marchetti SM.79 Sparviero.
CANT Z.506 Airone. These were kept in this very hangar during WW2 after being lifted out of the lake by the crane outside.
Fiat G-91Y.
Licence built F-104S, with F-86, AMX, Tornado F.3 and Frecce Tricolori G-91PAN.
First Italian aircraft to exceed the speed of sound, the Aerfer Sagittario II.
Frecce Tricolori MB.339.
More images here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/147661871@N04/albums/72157712453495152/with/49307751233/
For those of you wanting to make the trip there, and I would highly recommend it, a few tips. Conventional wisdom says to catch a train to Vigna di Valle and attempt to catch a taxi from the cafe. Don't get off at Vigna di Valle, as the taxis often refuse to go out there from Bracciano, which is where they come from. Go straight to Bracchiano; there are almost always taxis at the train station and they will charge only 15 Euro to go to the museum. You can also organise a return trip with the same driver. Trains to Bracchiano are also more frequent from Rome. There is a bus from Bracchiano, but, don't be tight, it's only a 30 Euro round trip and the museum is free.
Thanks for looking.
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On 9/26/2019 at 9:30 AM, KevinK said:
The specific aircraft I want to do is MJ627, if that's of any relevance.
Here are a couple of pictures of the titular MJ627 outside the Biggin Hill Heritage Hangar taken last year, from where it conducts joyflights.
A good view of the canopy layout.
On 9/26/2019 at 9:07 AM, Troy Smith said:There are essentially two official Supermarine conversions: the single T.Mk.VIII demonstrator, which still exists as G-AIDN
This is the T.VIII G-AIDN as MT818, at the same location. The canopy layout in evidence.
And just for kicks, SM520 taken at Goodwood last year, too, and although these have been altered for effect for a project, they also show a contemporary two-seat canopy layout.
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Here are a couple from my own website, This first one is from a XIV, although a little grainy owing to the shitty gear I had at the time:
http://warbirdswalkaround.wixsite.com/warbirds/nh799?lightbox=dataItem-ioi8eliq
This one is the tail section of an F.21 undergoing restoration, taken with a 35mm film camera, so not great quality.
http://warbirdswalkaround.wixsite.com/warbirds/la198?lightbox=dataItem-ighlu0mo1
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6 hours ago, Max Headroom said:
Some good stuff there. How did the F-5 get there?
Gifted by the North Vietnamese. You can see the markings of South Vietnam on its flanks. F-5s and A-37s were sent to Warsaw Pact countries for examination. The MLP in Cracow also has the same types received for the same reason.
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Tucked away at the far end of Finow's runways is the Luftfahrtmuseum Finowfurt on the site of a former Soviet Air Force and LSK fighter base. Located an hour's drive outside Berlin, Finow has an interesting history, as during Nazi times it was one of the main airfields of KG 200, the secretive experimental unit that operated a handful of Allied types alongside standard Luftwaffe aircraft, including B-17s and B-24s. Unfortunately at the small and rather rustic site, there is nothing that indicates this facet of the site's history. The images have had the colour drained out of them; I wanted to experiment with colour to reflect the general rustic nature of the place. Finow is still an active airfield, with a small portion of the hard standing built as a fighter station for the Soviets in use, the rest is covered by a solar farm. Finow's control tower.
Su-22 gate guard. A taste of the state of the collection.
Arrestor barrier.
There are aircraft and displays inside the hardened aircraft shelters, including this MiG-15UTI and MiG-21F-13.
PZL Dromader in front of a shelter capped by a radome.
LSK MiG-23BN.
VEB-14P, licence built Il-14 in Dresden.
Yak-28R, one of the types stationed at Finow.
PZL An-2T.
L-29, evidence that the staff do work on the aircraft.
Interflug Tu-134.
Mi-8T.
Cosmetically challenged MiG-23S.
Lenin looking on sternly at the foreign tourists.
Thanks for looking.
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4 minutes ago, Alpha Delta 210 said:
The collection looks amazing, it's just a shame that the exhibits are not particularly well cared for.
Yes indeed. Was impressed with the museum as a whole - it's huge, but the aircraft are not well looked after at all. Note the flat tyres on the CF-100, the Nord and the Hurri. The Oxford, in the background in the Mosquito image, hasn't had its nose for years.
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More from Brussels.
Avro Canada CF-100.
Nord 1002.
Fairey Battle.
de Havilland Mosquito.
Bucker Bu 181.
Sad looking Hurricane.
Fairchild Bolingbroke.
Douglas A-26.
Mil Mi-24.
Thanks for looking.
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Images from the rather vast military museum in the centre of Brussels. The aircraft hall is impressive, but some of the machines are run down and desperately need attention, and a good clean.
Caravelle.
Maurice Farman MF.11.
Meteor and Spitfire.
Spad XIII.
Sopwith 1 1/2 Strutter.
Ju 52/3mg3e.
C-119.
RAF RE.8.
The aviation hall in all its splendour and dust.
More to come.
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The remains of Anhalter Bahnhof, to jog your memory further, Mr T.
An illustration within the Anhalter Bhf U-bahn station.
More of Berlin if you are interested:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/147661871@N04/albums/72157709594792612/with/48264721357/
This is a walking tour that I completed within a day. It's not captioned, so you might have to guess why I've photographed what I have.
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SNCAC Martinet.
CASA 352L
Klemm Kl 35B.
Arado Ar 79.
Nord 1002 Pengouin.
Bf 109E.
Nude Gotha Go 242.
Bucker Bu 181 Panzerfaust.
He 162.
Missiles and miscellany.
Thanks for looking.
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Hi Guys, Images from the Deutsches Technikmuseum in Berlin. The museum from the footbridge over the Lanwehr Canal. The C-47 used to sit outside the big terminal at Tempelhof.
This is a model of the Deutsches Luftfahrt Sammlung, the Nazis' big aviation museum, which opened in 1936 to coincide with the XI Olympiade, the centrepiece of which was the Dornier Do X. Choccy fish if you can name all the aircraft.
This is what the main entrance looked like; note the Spitfire at bottom right. The museum caught fire during an air raid in 1943 and most of the collection was destroyed, some airframes survived and are now in the collection of the MLP in Cracow. The Airco DH.9A at Hendon used to be there.
This is a 'then and now' comparison. It was taken on Alt Moabit next to the Berlin Hauptbahnhof, just across the Spree River from the Reichstag.
Arado Ar 96.
Nord 1100 Noralpha.
Ju 88G and Fi 156.
Bf 110 and Fw 44.
Ju 87.
A slice of the Dornier Do X.
More to come.
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Great photos and excellent tips as well. Those are impressively low shutter speeds, and the results are evident, Alpha Delta 210.
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1 hour ago, Smudge said:
Are those aircraft replicas?
The full size ones? No, they are the originals. That was Clement Ader's Avion III that he built in 1897 (obviously the outer covering has been replaced) and that Bleriot XI was indeed the one Louis Bleriot flew across the Channel in in 1909. The Dufaux helicopter was also the one that the brothers actually flew for the crowds at St Cloud. It wasn't large enough to carry a person, being a scale demonstrator only. Only the Deperdussin and Antoinette are reproductions.
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The Musée des Arts et Métiers is in downtown Paris is a science museum and has a small aviation collection of interesting artefacts. The full size airframes are historic each in their own right, which makes this a worthy destination after visiting the Musée de L'Air at le Bourget, especially since the pioneer and Great War gallery there seems to have been stuck in refurbishment limbo for years now. Some images.
By far the star at the museum is Clement Ader's Avion III.
Ader's novel and complex steam engine that powered the Avion III.
The vehicle gallery inside the old church.
The ungainly Breguet R.U.1.
Robert Esnault-Pelterie's R.E.P. of 1908.
Louis Blériot's English Channel crossing XI.
Not an aeroplane, but Marcel Leyat's Hélica D.21, which was known as "L'avion sans ailes" - the aircraft without wings.
Another 'not an aircraft'; this bicycle was designed by Clement Ader.
Model of a Deperdussin A.
A model of an Antoinette monoplane.
Swiss brothers Armand and Henri Dufaux's unpiloted hélicoptère of 1905, which they flew from the Parc de St Cloud near Paris. This is the full size vehicle.
Thanks for looking.
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Very nice indeed. I was at the event at Carpiquet on 7 June; a bit badly organised and the weather didn't help matters, but your photos do it justice.
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A few 'normal' pictures of aircraft.
L-29.
G-91.
Atlantic.
RF-4E.
Gatow.
F-104G ZELL.
Halberstadt CL IV.
Casa 2.111 in disguise.
Inside the main hall.
The Chipmunk that carried out the last RAF flight over DDR controlled East Berlin from Gatow.
Crashed Bf 108.
Thanks for looking.
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Hi Guys, a look at the aviation collection at Gatow. I've been before and the aircraft outside are rustic and unkempt, which called for some experimental photography. I've been fiddling with contrast and exposure where appropriate. it's not to everyone's tastes, but here goes.
More to come from Gatow.
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On 3/23/2019 at 5:20 AM, redcap said:
Personally, I would have loved an Avro 504 or a Sopwith 1 1/2 strutter or (I have all but given up on hope on these two ) a Dr1 or SPAD XIII.
It astounds me to see the diversity of stuff they are producing and yes, I agree, Gary. I'm still waiting on a Sopwith Cuckoo - although in hindsight, that's exactly the obscure type they might be likely to produce. Fingers' crossed.
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14 hours ago, zigster said:
That Trabant in "sandy" base paint, sure must be from Africa Campaign
One of their base colours. Maybe the manufacturers had an alterior motive! A better example spotted in Zossen and an example in the other popular base colour on display at the kitschy Trabiworld in downtown Berlin across the road from Goering's RLM building.
The Trabant would have been a nice wee car, if it wasn't so awful.
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Thanks, rossm. Now those decals look quite the business and replicate your panel lines excellently, including the upper wing fuel tank panels. I notice that the decal also has lines for the APU, it's worth remembering that not all the -100s had an APU fitted. Great work so far.
Macchi M.39 Schneider Cup
in Work in Progress - Aircraft
Posted
Hm, the M.39 is very pretty. I look forward to the finished result.
M.39 side
M.39
Here's the Fiat C.29.
C-29
Moa, I've sent you a PM.