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So, writing a story where a bunch of young college-age
women discover some crated L-19s in a corner of a hangar. I'm planning that they assemble them under the watchful eye of a semi-retired pilot and A&P who can sign off on the FAA paperwork. Once the airplanes are assembled and flying, then what? I had the thought that the women could dress up as WW II Wasps and go to air shows. It would be funny as hell to have them put on a low-horsepower version of a Thunderbird airshow. What kind of vaguely aerobatic-like things could a stock L-19 perform? More than once? -- -- Marten Kemp (Fix ISP to reply) |
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On 10/6/2013 8:07 AM, Marten Kemp wrote:
So, writing a story where a bunch of young college-age women discover some crated L-19s in a corner of a hangar. I'm planning that they assemble them under the watchful eye of a semi-retired pilot and A&P who can sign off on the FAA paperwork. Once the airplanes are assembled and flying, then what? I had the thought that the women could dress up as WW II Wasps and go to air shows. It would be funny as hell to have them put on a low-horsepower version of a Thunderbird airshow. What kind of vaguely aerobatic-like things could a stock L-19 perform? More than once? Most aircraft can perform aerobatics...see Bob Hoover. My own checkout in an L-19 included loops, and if I recall, the Army familiarization firm also referenced aerobatics. However, story-wise, keep in mind that the L-19 was NOT a World War II aircraft, and thus was never associated with the WASPs. First flight was four years after the war ended. It flew in the Korean War, but the WASPs had been dissolved years earlier. Ron Wanttaja |
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On 10/6/2013 11:32 AM, Ron Wanttaja wrote:
On 10/6/2013 8:07 AM, Marten Kemp wrote: So, writing a story where a bunch of young college-age women discover some crated L-19s in a corner of a hangar. I'm planning that they assemble them under the watchful eye of a semi-retired pilot and A&P who can sign off on the FAA paperwork. Once the airplanes are assembled and flying, then what? I had the thought that the women could dress up as WW II Wasps and go to air shows. It would be funny as hell to have them put on a low-horsepower version of a Thunderbird airshow. What kind of vaguely aerobatic-like things could a stock L-19 perform? More than once? Most aircraft can perform aerobatics...see Bob Hoover. My own checkout in an L-19 included loops, and if I recall, the Army familiarization firm also referenced aerobatics. However, story-wise, keep in mind that the L-19 was NOT a World War II aircraft, and thus was never associated with the WASPs. First flight was four years after the war ended. It flew in the Korean War, but the WASPs had been dissolved years earlier. Thanks for the information. As far as the story goes, the young women aren't going to be limited to actual historical facts but are aiming at verisimilitude - "close enough to be believable by the casual observer. The aircraft are authentic, the uniforms are authentic, so what if the timing doesn't quite match up?" -- -- Marten Kemp (Fix ISP to reply) |
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