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#1
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![]() One B-52, possibly the G version. Painted green camo, foreground. Two Tu-95 Bear Bombers (Recon versions?) Ones with 4 turboprop engines and silver and white paint. Looks like Bear G or Hs to me. One An-124 Transport (In back, painted white in blue trim. 4 engines.) One C-130 Hercules transport (I think it is behind the first row of planes. Painted green.) KC-10 as the other poster identified. The thing with the An-124 is, if it has four engines it is the An-124. If it has six, it is the An-225. I think there are only a couple of those big boys flying around. Twin tail on the 225, and noticeably larger than the single tailed 24 and 124. (When it absolutely, positively has to be there overnight.... and is massive....) And those 124s are literally acrobatic! I watched a very low altitude demo over the rusting junkyards of Otay Mesa at the US/Mexican border during the 1988 Brown Field airshow - the Soviet crew tossed that giant thing around to the point that the C-5 crew literally looked shocked. I mean stunned into disbelief. I was waiting for the unbelievable air demonstration to end in a spectacular crash, but the Antonov smoothly carved its way around the sky like you would expect a T-6 Texan - just amazing to see something that size doing HUGE wingovers and 180-degree course reversals in what seemed like the distance of its own length. I've never witnessed finer, or scarier, airmanship in reference to a cargo aircraft.. v/r Gordon ====(A+C==== USN SAR Donate your memories - write a note on the back and send your old photos to a reputable museum, don't take them with you when you're gone. |
#2
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Oh, by the way:
B-52's will be refitted with new jet engines. Sure they will, "they" have been saying that since 1996. It won't happen. BUFDRVR "Stay on the bomb run boys, I'm gonna get those bomb doors open if it harelips everyone on Bear Creek" |
#3
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You, ve probably never seen AN-72 (An-74 predcessor). on the pre display, it
scared the sh*t out of Le Bourget officials! It is a darn cargo-lifting fighter! -- Nele NULLA ROSA SINE SPINA Krztalizer wrote in message ... One B-52, possibly the G version. Painted green camo, foreground. Two Tu-95 Bear Bombers (Recon versions?) Ones with 4 turboprop engines and silver and white paint. Looks like Bear G or Hs to me. One An-124 Transport (In back, painted white in blue trim. 4 engines.) One C-130 Hercules transport (I think it is behind the first row of planes. Painted green.) KC-10 as the other poster identified. The thing with the An-124 is, if it has four engines it is the An-124. If it has six, it is the An-225. I think there are only a couple of those big boys flying around. Twin tail on the 225, and noticeably larger than the single tailed 24 and 124. (When it absolutely, positively has to be there overnight.... and is massive....) And those 124s are literally acrobatic! I watched a very low altitude demo over the rusting junkyards of Otay Mesa at the US/Mexican border during the 1988 Brown Field airshow - the Soviet crew tossed that giant thing around to the point that the C-5 crew literally looked shocked. I mean stunned into disbelief. I was waiting for the unbelievable air demonstration to end in a spectacular crash, but the Antonov smoothly carved its way around the sky like you would expect a T-6 Texan - just amazing to see something that size doing HUGE wingovers and 180-degree course reversals in what seemed like the distance of its own length. I've never witnessed finer, or scarier, airmanship in reference to a cargo aircraft.. v/r Gordon ====(A+C==== USN SAR Donate your memories - write a note on the back and send your old photos to a reputable museum, don't take them with you when you're gone. |
#4
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BUFDRVR wrote:
Oh, by the way: B-52's will be refitted with new jet engines. Sure they will, "they" have been saying that since 1996. It won't happen. BUFDRVR "Stay on the bomb run boys, I'm gonna get those bomb doors open if it harelips everyone on Bear Creek" 96? When I worked at Pratt and Whitney in '89-'91, I remember seeing artist's concepts of B-52s with 2037s or 2040s. Don't know if it was part of a gov't sponsored study, or just wishful thinking on P&W's part. |
#5
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![]() You, ve probably never seen AN-72 (An-74 predcessor). on the pre display, it scared the sh*t out of Le Bourget officials! It is a darn cargo-lifting fighter! Probably same pilot, sitting upon his giant brass balls ![]() |
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