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On Dec 25, 1:54*pm, Monk wrote:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-TE7MOuo7c Monk Any plans out there for this build? |
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On Fri, 26 Dec 2008 18:52:51 -0800 (PST), Monk
wrote: On Dec 25, 1:54*pm, Monk wrote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-TE7MOuo7c Monk Any plans out there for this build? Why would you want to? It wouldn't be a very good airplane for sport flying; it was desinged for one purpose only: to be the smallest in the world (and it isn't even that, any more). -Dana -- When Columbus came to America, there were no taxes, no debts, and no pollution. The women did all the work while the men hunted or fished all day. Ever since then, a bunch of idiotic do-gooders have been trying to "improve" the place. |
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Dana M. Hague wrote:
On Fri, 26 Dec 2008 18:52:51 -0800 (PST), Monk wrote: On Dec 25, 1:54 pm, Monk wrote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-TE7MOuo7c Monk Any plans out there for this build? Why would you want to? It wouldn't be a very good airplane for sport flying; it was desinged for one purpose only: to be the smallest in the world (and it isn't even that, any more). -Dana Add to that. it's highly unlikely there were any plans per se drawn for it in the first place... |
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![]() Any plans out there for this build? ------------------------------------------------------------------- Yea Godz! Get serious! You had to be a Super Pilot just to get that sonofabitch off the ground and a Super-Super pilot to get it back down again, Whereas, that thing from... forgetful now... up in the top end of the Other Valley... LOCKHEED fer crysakes. That thing from Lockheed actually Worked! Oh my how it did. Three young draftees, Zero flight time, NEVER been in an aeroplane, all three taking that big step forward when you said it's liable to kill you but if it don't it could win the war for us -- and all three of them silly-assed kids taking the Big Step. And it Worked! Start going slow to learn how to keep it straight and it kept going and went right up into the air and after their first landing you couldn't KEEP those kids from flying it, it was so easy to do and so much fun. And of course, they took them away and parked them over behind the mock-ups in the locked hanger where they were the only things made out of metal... Seriously... mock-ups were all WOOD and the only guy who knew they were there was the Boss Carpenter and the Major in charge of the program. But we'd already landed and everyone's Dire Predictions had proved false and so they did what bureaucracies always do -- THEY CRUSHED THEM. Wouldn't even let us salvage the engines, which were Lycoming O-145's on two of them and a Continental A-40 on the other. Crushed them. Fred Weick actually cried when he heard. Because the thing would NOT spin and as it neared the ground, at anything less than terminal velocity, it would very politely flatten out and if you remembered to reduce the power, it would sit itself down on its tricycle landing gear and probably blow a tire, because you were probably doingabout ninety. American brains... and American politics. You could put 300 pounds in that little sucker and it flew just fine. No parachutes of course, just One soldier (volunteered) and the biggest problem was getting them to Come Back!! because once they learned how to turn, they'd stay up there until the fuel warning buzzer went off. THEN they would come back, sometimes downwind, and put it down literally ANYWHERE.... taxiways, SIDEWALK (for crysakes! Why? Because he thought he could [and did] and all the 'real' runways were busy, he said, as part of his apology.) Air-Mobile. 1944. And IT REALLY WORKED. Ask John Thrope about it. And some of the other REAL engineers. Tough, TOUGH little bird up there on the north end of the runway, borrowing hangar space from Lockheed, flying on weekends because it was classified 'SECRET'. But once you were past the MP's you could do any damn thing you wanted and there was nobody to stop you because General on down, if they didn't have a 'yellow pass' "I'm afraid I can't allow that, sir." Because the MP's never knew when it was a drill or for real, and they turned away some of the highest of the high. And here we are today, SIXTY-FIVE years later and they're still treating it like a big f**king SECRET. -R.S.Hoover |
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On Dec 28, 8:59*am, Dana M. Hague wrote:
On Fri, 26 Dec 2008 18:52:51 -0800 (PST), Monk wrote: On Dec 25, 1:54*pm, Monk wrote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-TE7MOuo7c Monk Any plans out there for this build? Why would you want to? I don't know. I thought of this conecpt, flying prone, before about twenty plus years ago while in High school. Then I came across this bird. Monk |
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On Dec 28, 5:59*am, Dana M. Hague wrote:
Why would you want to? *It wouldn't be a very good airplane for sport flying; it was desinged for one purpose only: *to be the smallest in the world (and it isn't even that, any more). * ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Because the guy making the engines (McCulloch? Some damn thing... two- stroker) ...hadn't received a Stop Order!! Seriously! VE day and no Stop Order, the VJ Day and STILL no Stop Order, and they're cranking out that crazy little engine as fast as they can... ball-bearing crankshaft and a Ford carburetor and they were going right from the assembly line to New/Surplus distributors because the warehouses were all full and we had enough drones to train another wars-worth of gunners and then some, because The Jets Are Coming (was on everyone's lips) and guys were backing off, lookking at Ol Betsy, wondering how they convert her to run a Jet Engine because the Supply Guy over at El Segundo... who worked for Jack What's-his-name -- finally got permission to install a Real jet engine in the Project Plane instead of that copy of an English Nine (or Neine, or whatever... ) because we already knew that the Russians were going co-axial instead of centrifugal and it turned the Fat Bellied Project Plane into an F-86 and just in time, too. Except no one told PW or whoever, to stop building those centrifugal jets, which is why Grumman had to go with them for the Super Panther (which became the F9F dash 8). But they thot it would become New/Surplus the same way. Those were some very, VERY crazy years, just after the War... because the war was NOT over, inside the X-sheds, despite what everyone was saying. We had all those German jets up at the dry lakes and the real Bob Hoover was blowing everyone away and the Riding School was going full blast (and I got some pitchers to prove it). And the Window of Opportunity came roaring along and everyone was looking for a New Car and a bigger refrigerator and an automatic washing machine (it had Spin Dry!) and all that other Neat Stuff and the Window went roaring right on passed... and we missed it. Not once, but several times. Chopping up brand new airplanes, melting them down to make the wiring for the next Levittown, so's they'd burn down when the aluminum wires reacted with the brass fittings... and the General in Alaska asked, what as I supposed to do with all these airplanes, now that we won't allow those Russian ladies to fly them outta here... and Washinton said: Burn them. And that's what he did. Except for half a dozen less one, which landed at A****er and got 'arrested.' (I didn't know you could 'arrest' a DC-6. But they did. The others made it to El Segundo, then to Tijuana in the middle of the night where they got stuffed full of P-51's before going to Mexico, where they set until they got charts for Natal and Ghana and places like that. Then they disappeared. But the P-51's ended up flying wing with the Me-109's and the Focke-Wulf-190's (?) Is that right? Mustangs and Fw-190-3's in the same formation? And everyone is fighting to get to fly the German iron because it's got an ejection seat! ...which is pretty damn dumb because no one is wearing a parachute anyway!! And they were fighting Spitfires? Go on, pull the other one. But that's what happened, trying to keep promises that were made in 1917 and had been broken by both sides... and still are, come to think of it. Funny kinda war. The idea was to 'transfer' the DC-6's to Don Douglas, cuz of some sort of political BS in CANADA? Yep, in Canada. Because they wanted to put Rolls Royce engines in them and call them British Built... without bothering to check the MTBO of the Rolls as compared to those nice round engines. So someone said 'Get it outta here,' meaning to move it to where it couldn't be seen from the highway. (Remember the camouflage netting? The stuff OVER the highways? Yeah... me too :-) And this Jewish Bag-man was running around in a blue, 1940 Ford Sedan with a pig-skin 'doctor's bag' except it was full of MONEY, and in the back seat was two guys who would look at you but NEVER SPOKE. (Talk about eery!) One worked for my 'Uncle John,' the other one worked for Harry Hopkins. Give them a nice, clean, just off the assembly line P-51 and he would give you lots of MONEY. They you would put the Mustang into the DC-6, along with miscellaneous stuff, most of which was yellow with GERMAN dials and came down from Palmdale (Why? Because they had lotsa airplanes but not enough GPU's and tow-bars that fit and stuff like that). Then came the Vanishing Act, down to Mexico, across the Caribbean and finally across the Atlantic, then Africa and the neatest one of all, pulling a Fuel Stop at a BRITISH field out in the desert where you couldn't do anything because everything that wasn't booby-trapped was mined! Then the man in the funny shorts would say 'Good luck, chaps." and you were free to take off at night and fly past the hotels so that you had to look UP to see their top floors... and ended up... not in British-controlled Palestine but in Money-Bag controlled 'Israel.' Where they grew oranges! Seriously: 'Product of Israel' My dad figured they cost about ten dollars per orange by the time they got to New York, where you could buy one for a dime. Dad wasn't political, he was a mechanic, who had tickets for everything from Armstrong-Siddley (??) to Junkers-Jumo (all marks, including some truly goofy stuff such as the Jumo 205C which didn't have an ignition system to FLY... but needed one to START) and for the Daimler-Benz DB-605 (most marks but not all), and had a habit of ****ing people off because after working on the airframes and the powerplants he'd walk away, leaving them to mount the bomb racks and gun pods and all that sort of stuff, saying "Not my war," wiping his hands on a grease rag. So they refused to pay him. So he shrugged and hitch-hiked home and in later years, refused to work for them until they paid him, which they never did, so he never did. -R.S.Hoover |
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But the P-51's ended up flying wing with the Me-109's
and the Focke-Wulf-190's (?) Is that right? Mustangs and Fw-190-3's in the same formation? And everyone is fighting to get to fly the German iron because it's got an ejection seat! ...which is pretty damn dumb because no one is wearing a parachute anyway!! Just to put things right... He 162, He 219 and Do 335 were equipped with those (Heinkel) ejection seats... Regards KH |
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![]() wrote And here we are today, SIXTY-FIVE years later and they're still treating it like a big f**king SECRET. I'm afraid I got totally lost, on this one. What are you saying; that there is a little GA airplane out there that is hands down better than everything else, and it is a big secret? What is/was it, or what was it called, and where can information be found about it? -- Jim in NC |
#10
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![]() What is/was it, or what was it called, and where can information be found about it? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Roger that. I've only seen it mentioned a couple of times. Saw a picture of it once. The deal was, someone looked at how much it cost to deliver a paratrooper and said they could come up with an AIRPLANE that could do better than that... and they did. But it's roll-out came after D-Day and there was a lot of pressure to kill the program, but three examples with different aft sections survived the war... and were then crushed & smelted. It was just a simple little one-seater that could be shipped disassembled. Bubble canopy. Fixed trike gear. I could ran on mogas and could deliver 300 pounds anywhere within 200 miles (calm air assumed). 'Rudder' pedals were tied to the nose-wheel !! It came in three ddifferent models. One had a V-tail the others were conventional but the differences had to do with something else -- range, load or armament. No gauges to speak of. The 'pathfinder' was meant to be a series of Piper Cubs and the thing was meant to land virtually anywhere with 'one flip or less' Meaning a nose-over was acceptable (and the only thing the pilots were trained for). The official story is that it was never flown except by pilots but the 'real' story is that at least three "Army sergeants" meaning they weren't recruits, with no prior aviation experience managed to fly them using only the instruction manual for their 'flight training.' And every time I mention it I get a ration of **** so to hell with them. I'll bet you dollars to donuts Leeon Davis knew what I was talking about :-) And if that sounds kooky, it doesn't even BEGIN to come close to some of the wacky ideas that were proposed AND tested, such as using pigeons as 'emergency navigators,' affixing a one-ounce THERMITE charge to a BAT and a bunch of other equally strange stuff. My dad happened to know quite a bit about this program because he helped fabricate an A-40 engine mount for one of the three after it suffered a prop-strike. -Bob |
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