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#31
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Ron Natalie wrote:
Jim Logajan wrote: Some aircraft named after birds: Lark (or is that named after a cigarette...show us your Lark pack!) Sounds like an ad campaign before my time. :-) Some aircraft named after plants: ? Spruce goose (of course, that's not it's real name) Hmmm. I considered that but wasn't sure whether it would fly - I guess my thinking was rather wooden. Ahem. Some aircraft named after land animals: Cub! You forgot the cub? I forgot or overlooked a lot! But I think "cub" is perhaps a little too broad since it can mean "the young of certain carnivorous mammals such as the bear or wolf or lion": http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=cub By the way, I used this site as one source (very handy): http://marchairmuseum.com/rouen01.php "This list of 2892 airplane names (on ten pages) was compiled by Ed Rouen, who for many years was the chief cataloger of the library at the San Diego Aerospace Museum." |
#32
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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 Jose wrote: A better question would be "Is there a bird that doesn't have an airplane named after it?" Dodo. Please. Leave MX out of this thread. BL. - -- Brad Littlejohn | Email: Unix Systems Administrator, | Web + NewsMaster, BOFH.. Smeghead! ![]() PGP: 1024D/E319F0BF 6980 AAD6 7329 E9E6 D569 F620 C819 199A E319 F0BF -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.7 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFGLkHZyBkZmuMZ8L8RAgP0AKCC4dgwxM9RBjyK9owD5O FMXC8E9gCdHCwT /+tbzJ3J9bAa4WkwCbIxWBM= =RHnX -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#33
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Jim Logajan wrote:
Hmmm. I considered that but wasn't sure whether it would fly - I guess my thinking was rather wooden. Ahem. Didn't it fly for about 120' or something? |
#34
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Erik wrote:
Jim Logajan wrote: Hmmm. I considered that but wasn't sure whether it would fly - I guess my thinking was rather wooden. Ahem. Didn't it fly for about 120' or something? It actually flew for over a mile. Hughes kept the plane maintained at "flight ready" status for over 33 years - at a cost of about one million dollars a year: http://www.sprucegoose.org/aircraft_.../exhibits.html I've been to the Evergreen Aviation Museum in McMinnville Oregon and have, like many visitors, been able to walk around inside the Spruce Goose (or at least a small part of it). The Evergreen museum is nice in that they have both the fastest plane there (the Blackbird - and at the time I visited they had a similarly designed drone vehicle) and the largest (Spruce Goose). I'd recommend it for anyone visiting Oregon. Oh yeah - the thing I didn't think would "fly" was my inclusion of the Spruce Goose under "Planes named after plants". The plane obviously flew fine. :-) |
#35
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Jim Logajan wrote:
It actually flew for over a mile. Hughes kept the plane maintained at "flight ready" status for over 33 years - at a cost of about one million dollars a year: Now that is an expensive annual. |
#36
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![]() "Jim Logajan" wrote Oh yeah - the thing I didn't think would "fly" was my inclusion of the Spruce Goose under "Planes named after plants". The plane obviously flew fine. :-) I'm not so sure that the Spruce Goose did fly fine. With that large of a wingspan, on the only flight that it ever did, it never left ground effect. I have theorized that Hughes knew that he did not have enough reserve lift to leave ground effect, and so never flew it again. I realize that there were a lot of "situations" around his attitude about the plane and the government's attitude about the plane, but I still would think that he would have flown it again, in a real flight test, if it had performed as he had hoped. -- Jim in NC |
#37
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"C J Campbell" wrote in message
news:2007042401095175249-christophercampbell@hotmailcom... On 2007-04-23 19:16:56 -0600, Jose said: A better question would be "Is there a bird that doesn't have an airplane named after it?" Dodo. Woodpecker. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor http://www.akaflieg.vo.tum.de/Englis...History_E.html In 1951, the Mü10 'Milan' was re-activated from the German Museum in Munich where the glider had survived the war. Three gliders - a Mü13 reproduction, the "Spatz" (sparrow) and the "Specht" (woodpecker) - were acquired, later a Klemm tow plane was added. -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
#38
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On Apr 24, 6:12 am, B A R R Y wrote:
Jose wrote: A better question would be "Is there a bird that doesn't have an airplane named after it?" Dodo. Turkey or Chicken? G Vulture. Although there is an ultralight called the L'il Buzzard. |
#39
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more after birds:
Harrier Vampire (well it flies) Seagull Swift Dove Heron Blackbird Bugs Gnat (Foland) Scorpion Fish Swordfish (Fairey) Land Sea & Animals Vixen Hind Walrus Sea otter Seal Beaver Buffalo Caribou Chipmunk Flamingo Weather Phenomenon Tempest Typhoon Hurricane Thunderbolt "Jim Logajan" wrote in message .. . wrote: Are there any planes named after birds? Lots. Some aircraft named after birds: Osprey Hummingbird Shrike Albatross Hawk Falcon Goshawk Robin Condor Nightingale Raven Some aircraft named after bugs: Grasshopper Mosquito Hornet Wasp Moth Black Widow Some aircraft named after plants: ? Some aircraft named after aquatic animals: Dolphin Stingray Some aircraft named after land animals: Camel Buffalo Caribou Moose Snake Bobcat Cobra Bearcat Mustang Cougar |
#40
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On 2007-04-24 14:36:02 -0700, "Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe" The Sea Hawk at
wow way d0t com said: "C J Campbell" wrote in message news:2007042401095175249-christophercampbell@hotmailcom... On 2007-04-23 19:16:56 -0600, Jose said: A better question would be "Is there a bird that doesn't have an airplane named after it?" Dodo. Woodpecker. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor http://www.akaflieg.vo.tum.de/Englis...History_E.html In 1951, the Mü10 'Milan' was re-activated from the German Museum in Munich where the glider had survived the war. Three gliders - a Mü13 reproduction, the "Spatz" (sparrow) and the "Specht" (woodpecker) - were acquired, later a Klemm tow plane was added. -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. Hahahaha. They named a plane after a woodpecker. That somehow just tickles my funny bone. Okay, did they ever name an aircraft after the archaeopteryx? -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
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