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Which Aerodrome?

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Old 23rd Jun 2008, 15:26
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West coast?
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Old 23rd Jun 2008, 16:06
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Harbour Grace, Newfoundland: http://jproc.ca/rrp/h_grace.html

Next:



The year is 1939 and the "airport" no longer exists.

Last edited by PaperTiger; 23rd Jun 2008 at 17:38.
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Old 23rd Jun 2008, 18:38
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B17 at San Francisco World's Fair?

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Old 23rd Jun 2008, 18:50
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Originally Posted by John Hill
B17 at San Francisco World's Fair?
Correct. I'm impressed !

The "airport" was the Treasure Island Panam Clipper base, later AAF.

Over to you.
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Old 23rd Jun 2008, 19:06
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Harbour Grace, Newfoundland is still a registered airport, location identifier CHG2, and is operated by the Town of Harbour Grace.
It is listed in the current edition of the Canada Flight Supplement. Runway 09/27, 2000-ft turf. No winter maint. 65 ft high rock outcrop 450 ft E of thld rwy 27. Rwy may be soft when wet.
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Old 23rd Jun 2008, 20:20
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The Spirit Of Harbour Grace.

I've never flown QBI but got some time on her sister ship, QBC.
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Old 23rd Jun 2008, 20:45
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Thank you PaperTiger but the clues made it easy!

However work time calls here in the antipodes so

open house!
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Old 23rd Jun 2008, 20:55
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This will not last until the Antipodes drift back to the barbie!


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Old 23rd Jun 2008, 20:59
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Cold Lake Alberta?
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Old 23rd Jun 2008, 21:01
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Not the Cool Pool, not Alberta.
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Old 23rd Jun 2008, 21:53
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Great posting twochai! Check your PM.
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Old 24th Jun 2008, 04:56
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Hmmm. Two Canucks exchanging secret notes about an airfield with snow on the ground.

Could it possibly be this one?




Camp Borden, Ontario

Picture from here: http://www.airforce.forces.gc.ca/16w.../airmus4_e.asp
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Old 24th Jun 2008, 11:24
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You have it, I42, it is (was) RCAF Station Camp Borden, the birthplace of the RFC in Canada in 1917, later home of #1 SFTS and the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan. That curved hangar line is a dead giveaway.

It was also the site of Robert Turnbull's early experiments credited as the first successful variable pitch propellor.

Over to you, India Four Two!
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Old 24th Jun 2008, 13:55
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Thanks, two chai. Yes, the curve is a giveaway, but I had never seen a picture of Borden before. However, I immediately looked up what I knew to be the biggest early military airfield in Canada. How on earth did they manage to avoid the military obsession for straight lines and right angles? I can imagine the RSM having a fit.

BTW, a nice picture of the 504K, for which I have a soft spot, since both my grandfathers learnt to fly in them. However, the artist has managed to overlook the requirement for windscreens! For British readers, note the "Imperial" registration prefix for Canada in the 1920s - "G-C". I'm not sure when the switch to "CF-" happened.

Here's a quite difficult one (I think, but I imagine I could be proven wrong very quickly). Where was this nice art deco terminal? Extra points for identifying the aircraft with the two-row radials.


Last edited by India Four Two; 24th Jun 2008 at 14:51.
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Old 24th Jun 2008, 14:18
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How on earth did they manage to avoid the military obsession for straight lines and right angles? I can imagine the RSM having a fit.
It probably had something to do with the rocky outcrops and bogs around Camp Borden, which is located at the edge of the Canadian Shield. Pretty scrubby land!
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Old 25th Jun 2008, 00:14
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Not in Africa. Go west young man, well northwest to be precise.

I wondered about the aircraft being a Connie - the caption does not mention the type.

Edited to say that it doesn't look like this fire-breather (Photos: Lockheed C-121C Super Constellation (L-1049F) Aircraft Pictures | Airliners.net), so maybe a Douglas product?

BTW, re the link above, was it normal for this much fire out of the exhaust on a Super Connie?

Last edited by India Four Two; 25th Jun 2008 at 01:43.
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Old 25th Jun 2008, 04:06
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India

Wet starts were common, I always put the naughtiest of my ground handling team on fire bottle duty on start-up!
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Old 25th Jun 2008, 16:18
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XX,

That wasn't very nice of you, was it?

The Connie picture I linked to was in-flight. Was that normal? It would scare me if I was a passenger.

Back to the aerodrome in question. It's west of the Mississippi in one of the less populated states. The terminal is no longer there.

Someone has suggested to me that the aircraft is a C-118. That's possible, since this was also a military base. On the other hand, it could also be a civilian DC-6.

Edited to add that someone might chastise me by saying that most states west of the Mississippi are "less populated". So to clarify, even by western US standards, this state is still less populated.
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Old 26th Jun 2008, 14:47
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I'll start the guessing by saying it is Alamogordo, NM.
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Old 26th Jun 2008, 15:36
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Interesting guess, bri. Try a bit closer to home. There is a nuclear connection, but no detonations in this state.
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