Name that Flying Machine
One mans dog food is another mans CAC15...
However I did like it the one time I was served a piece of aforementioned marsupial.
It was much better than the fermented shark in Iceland.
However I did like it the one time I was served a piece of aforementioned marsupial.
It was much better than the fermented shark in Iceland.
Is anyone in charge?
Thought he`s on `sick leave `...hopefully....
Apologies for barging in! May I just borrow your illustrious brains for a moment?
This photo (borrowed with thanks for educational purposes) was in a certain book with a fairly detailed caption including key words like photo reconnaissance, WWI and Ninth Wing, Fienvillers, France 1916. It does not mention what particular aircraft though. Possibly an easy question for some? If so, apologies in advance.
This photo (borrowed with thanks for educational purposes) was in a certain book with a fairly detailed caption including key words like photo reconnaissance, WWI and Ninth Wing, Fienvillers, France 1916. It does not mention what particular aircraft though. Possibly an easy question for some? If so, apologies in advance.
Last edited by jolihokistix; 29th Mar 2022 at 09:34.
I'd put my money on Martinsyde Elephant. Look at this youtube video:
at 0:07 you can see the wing support mountings matching the picture
at 0:34 you can see the wing root structure which matches the picture.
at 0:55 you can see the upper wing matching the picture.
That camera is C-type, so post summer 1915 but later on the L-model was introduced which was placed inside the hull. This fits the 1916 time frame.
On this picture of a G102 Elephant the similarity to the AC on the picture on your post is significant.
Edit: I'll add that based on the "reliable" interweb wiki the ninth wing was originally RFC HQ Wing and used Martinsyde G.100's from mid 1916 till 1917 and was used in recon missions in France and Middle-east. Someone better in the know on RFC units and their posts can confirm, complete or prove me wrong...
at 0:34 you can see the wing root structure which matches the picture.
at 0:55 you can see the upper wing matching the picture.
That camera is C-type, so post summer 1915 but later on the L-model was introduced which was placed inside the hull. This fits the 1916 time frame.
On this picture of a G102 Elephant the similarity to the AC on the picture on your post is significant.
Edit: I'll add that based on the "reliable" interweb wiki the ninth wing was originally RFC HQ Wing and used Martinsyde G.100's from mid 1916 till 1917 and was used in recon missions in France and Middle-east. Someone better in the know on RFC units and their posts can confirm, complete or prove me wrong...
Last edited by Beamr; 29th Mar 2022 at 09:44.
That is very interesting Beamr and fits together well. I’ll look further into this.
Many thanks in the meantime.
Many thanks in the meantime.
My pleasure! I love that type of puzzles.
Back on usual program I'll drop the actual quiz picture once more to make sure it doesn't go unnoticed by accident. So, what is standing on its long legs so steadily?
Back on usual program I'll drop the actual quiz picture once more to make sure it doesn't go unnoticed by accident. So, what is standing on its long legs so steadily?
Russian perhaps?
Ukrainian?
OKB1 -150 perhaps with a carefully cropped tail?
Georgian SU-25?
Nothing has been cropped from the picture so it is not a T-tail. You gentlemen are closing, other had the era right, the other had the aircraft role right.