![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
http://www.alexisparkinn.com/biplane_rides!.htm
If you've ever had the urge to experience aviation the way it was almost 80 years ago, this is your chance. It's just not every day you get to fly in a 1929 Travel Air! I took my daughter up last summer, and it is absolutely the coolest ride there is. Low, slow, with that big "Harley-sound" up front, all whilst wearing the leather helmet, scarf and goggles -- MAN, that is flying! Gary Lust, the owner/pilot, is the fellow who we are trusting to teach our 16 year-old son to fly -- so you KNOW what we think of his piloting skills. He's the best there is, IMHO, and he's flying a classic airplane from the Golden Age of Flight. Can it get better? Stop in Iowa City some time, if for no other reason than to check out this VERY cool plane. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay Honeck wrote:
http://www.alexisparkinn.com/biplane_rides!.htm If you've ever had the urge to experience aviation the way it was almost 80 years ago, this is your chance. It's just not every day you get to fly in a 1929 Travel Air! That is very cool. When you said 1929 Travel Air, I was thinking of a completely different airplane. I took a ride in a '29 Travel Air about a decade ago at an Antique Aircraft Assoc. fly-in, but it was a 6 seat 6000B model. It looks like Travel Air was a busy airplane company in 1929. Not only did they make the 3 seater and 6 seater, but they fielded the Mystery Ship at the Cleveland Air Races. It's surprising how many are still in the air. I rode in this one : http://airminded.net/ta6000/ta6_1oc.jpg Looks like this 6000B is still flying in Air Taxi Service in Alaska : http://www.alaskaseaplanes.com/nc9084/nc9084%20web.html And you were worried about Piper supplying parts for 25 yr. old airplanes! :-))) John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) -- Message posted via AviationKB.com http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forums...ation/200706/1 |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 26 Jun 2007 18:48:06 GMT, "JGalban via AviationKB.com"
u32749@uwe wrote in 7449cbb886a81@uwe: It looks like Travel Air was a busy airplane company in 1929. Not only did they make the 3 seater and 6 seater, but they fielded the Mystery Ship at the Cleveland Air Races. Umm, that would be this one: http://spotted.cjonline.com/pages/ph...gallery=308416 http://spotted.cjonline.com/pages/ga...8416&offset=80 http://www.thewhartons.net/pancho_barnes.htm She returned to the Powder Puff Derby the following year in a powerful new Travelair Mystery Ship, a low-winged speedster with huge wheel spats which has been called the most beautiful of the great racing airplanes. Blasting across the route at an average speed of 196.19 mph, she took the world’s speed record for women away from Amelia Earhart. http://www.air-racing-history.com/PI...o%20Barnes.htm First, however, would come a proper marriage, followed by the birth of a son. At the age of 18, Florence wed the Reverend C. Rankin Barnes, a prominent Episcopal priest, and settled down to the duties expected of a proper clergyman’s wife. In due course their son, William, was born. Not long afterwards, however, the young bride’s self-reliant personality asserted itself in dramatic fashion: abandoning church and child in 1928, she disguised herself as a man and signed on as a crewmember aboard a freighter headed for Mexico. Once the ship was safely docked at San Blas with a cargo of bananas and contraband guns, she jumped ship with a renegade sailor and spent four months roaming through the revolution-torn interior. Somewhere along this trek, while riding a donkey, her comrade dubbed her "Pancho" for her fancied resemblance to Don Quixote’s faithful companion. She was delighted with her new nickname, and kept it for the rest of her life. Into the Air Returning to San Marino later that year, she turned her eyes toward the skies. By then, Wall Street’s Bull Market was roaring along, the public was wildly air-minded in the aftermath of Lindbergh’s flight to Paris, and the nation’s adrenaline level perfectly matched her own. Pancho bought an OX-5 powered Travelair biplane, hired an irascible but expert instructor, and set out to learn how to fly. Defying her teacher’s best efforts to discourage his "dilettante" student, she soloed after only six hours of instruction. The young socialite promptly celebrated this feat by taking a friend aloft and buzzing the field while her passenger wing-walked among the flying wires. From that point onward, aviation became the dominant note in her life. Scorning the genteel aspects of her upbringing, Pancho took to wearing men’s clothes, often oil-stained and dishevelled, and to smoke cigars. Kitchen matches scratched across the seat of her pants replaced silver cigarette lighters, and her speech, never too delicate at the best of times, became notoriously coarse and salty. Although Pancho was always ready for a laugh, however, she was never a buffoon in the air. Always, she took flying seriously and went to great lengths to become a skilled pilot as well as a practical mechanic. Her professional approach to flying never, of course, prevented her from enjoying enormous fun along the way. Soon tiring of buzzing her husband’s dignified church during Sunday morning services, she assembled something called "Pancho Barnes’ Mystery Circus of the Air," and went on barnstorming tours with herself as a star performer. She shared the spotlight with an improbably handsome parachute jumper named Slim, who specialized in enticing young females from the audience into their first airplane ride and shortly--to their great surprise--into their first parachute jump as well. ... http://www.time.com/time/magazine/ar...8434-1,00.html Friday, Jun. 07, 1968 For the several hundred prospective buyers who strode into a hangar at the Orange County, Calif., Airport last week, the temptation to snap a ghostly salute was nearly irresistible. The planes were all part of the famous collection put together by Hollywood Stunt Flyers Frank Tallman and the late Paul Mantz. But such, at least, was not the case with one beat-up, prop-less oldtimer, listed as the "Travelair Mystery Ship." "Mystery ship, hell!" snorted Oldtime Aviatrix Florence Lowe ("Pancho") Barnes. "I bought this ship in 1930 and flew it to two women's world speed records." When she made the winning bid of $4,300 for her old plane, which had been in Mantz's collection, the crowd stood and applauded. Pancho Barnes, for her part, guaranteed to have her old ship back in shape and flying soon. "I've got a lot of friends out at Edwards Air Force Base," she said. "I'm sure they'll give me a hand." http://www.thewhartons.net/pancho_barnes.htm Of her personality and that clamorous era, little now remains: some concrete foundations and the remains of a fanciful stone fountain near the Edwards AFB firing range; a few photographs. The dim, rectangular outline of a dirt airstrip can still be made out from the air. There is a battered door from the ranch pickup, still faintly lettered, resting against a wall in the Air Force Flight Test Center Museum. But the Pancho stories still circulate freely in the flight community, some titillating, most nostalgic, all now recounted with tolerant smiles. For many years now, the people at Edwards have gathered together on the site of the Happy Bottom Riding Club for an annual barbecue which goes far into the night. And in a hangar in nearby Mojave, Pancho’s black-and-red Travelaire Mystery Ship is gradually returning to its original splendor. As always, Pancho had the last word: "Well ------- it, we had more fun in a week than most of the weenies in the world have in a lifetime." |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
That is very cool. When you said 1929 Travel Air, I was thinking of a
completely different airplane. I took a ride in a '29 Travel Air about a decade ago at an Antique Aircraft Assoc. fly-in, but it was a 6 seat 6000B model. It looks like Travel Air was a busy airplane company in 1929. Not only did they make the 3 seater and 6 seater, but they fielded the Mystery Ship at the Cleveland Air Races. It's surprising how many are still in the air. Yep, Travel Air was one of the most successful of the early aircraft companies. Considering that they had Lloyd Stearman, Walter Beech, and Clyde Cessna all on the payroll, I guess that's not surprising. Sadly, the Great Depression wiped them -- and dozens of others like them -- out. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
ION update - cool baby, cool | Montblack | Home Built | 5 | June 18th 07 06:41 AM |
ION update - cool baby, cool | Montblack | Piloting | 1 | June 16th 07 06:48 PM |
Cool Video... | [email protected] | Soaring | 19 | December 11th 05 06:33 PM |
Cool site | [email protected] | General Aviation | 0 | November 30th 04 09:35 PM |
Cool GA ariport near ABQ | [email protected] | Piloting | 3 | July 18th 04 10:40 PM |