PinkHarrier... Loved the pic of VQ-FAJ. You can imagine my amazement when I walked into a hangar at Bridge Pa, NZ in March 2007 and saw this:
ZK-AMW Aeronca 100. Bridge Pa Aerodrome, Hastings, NZ. 30 March 2007 :: ZKAMW.jpg :: Fotopic.Net |
Excellent pictures!!
I guess the Irvin-Bell Helicopter Sales was connected to the Irvin Air Chute Company of Letchworth makers of ( they claimed) 99.9% of all parachutes supplied to the RAF during the WW2. Plenty of space around Letchworth at that time to keep a helicopter! |
Originally Posted by oldandbald
I guess the Irvin-Bell Helicopter Sales was connected to the Irvin Air Chute Company of Letchworth makers of ( they claimed) 99.9% of all parachutes supplied to the RAF during the WW2.
Originally Posted by Flight, Sept 25th 1947, p 347
AT the end of August a new company, Irvin-Bell Helicopter Sales, Ltd., which has been formed to "keep the United Kingdom in the closest possible touch with helicopter development," gave its first demonstration of the Bell 47B to a small but important gathering at Prestwick Airport, location of the company's engineering and training division. Last Thursday, September 18th, another demonstration was given at Hanworth airfield and was attended by senior representatives of the Services, Ministries, Corporations and industry. The machine was put through its paces by "Jimmy" Youell, who finally placed it precisely on the lawn of the Hanworth Park Hotel which had been very appropriately chosen as a meeting place for the occasion. Irvin-Bell Helicopter Sales, Ltd. has resulted from the collaboration of Scottish Aviation, Ltd., with Mr. Leslie L. Irvin, founder of the Irving Air Chute Company, and the directors are the four of Scottish Aviation, namely, the Duke of Hamilton, Sir Ernest Lemon, Mr. D. F. Mclntyre and the Earl of Selkirk, together with Mr. Leslie Irvin, Captain Cyril Turner and Captain A. B. H. Youell of the Irving Air Chute Co. The head offices of the company are at Ickneild Way, Letchworth, Herts.
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Hmmm.. I failed to make the connection between Irvin and Letchworth!! Should have done as I called on the company a couple of times!!
Anyway thanks for putting that one to bed.......... Planemike |
Re Helicopter Rotor Patent
I thought I may pick some collective brains. Some time after my father died I discovered by accident in a search a patent in his and Andrew Dalrymple's (of Chilton monoplane fame) name. The original link was a PDF doc with diagrams but it now appears broken. Have found another which starts with:
" Abstract of GB573127 573,127. Helicopters. DALRYMPLE, A. W. H., and LINDSLEY, F. Dec. 3, 1943, Nos. 20265/43 and 4326/44. [Class 4] A helicopter of the type in which the sustaining rotor is positively driven by a prime mover about an upright axis transverse to the fuselage, is controlled in flight by a thrust-producing device, such as an airscrew or reaction jet, located at the tail of the machine and mounted in such a way that the line of thrust can be set at varying angles.." The actual link is GB Patent 573127 - Improvements in or relating to aircraft of the helicopter type Can anyone shed some light on the subject? I knew nothing about it. Below some pix I took of his drawings of the Chilton Olympia that I found after his death. |
Halifax Q1277
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Percival Prince G-ALJA
Karachi 19 May 1949 outside old airship hangar. On the way to Singapore to be used by Shell for exploration and reg as VR-SDB.
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Yet another brilliant photo. The hangar in the background is as interesting as the a/c. Sad to read the hangar is no longer there, dismantled in the 1960s apparently, on the instructions of Ayub Khan the then President of Pakistan. It was his contribution to saving the country's aviation heritage.
Planemike |
Cessna C34 VH-UYG
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The Bonanza was HB-EBF, an early -- and then very new -- 'straight' Model 35. It took part in the Lympne Air Races 30-31 August 1947, owner/pilot M. Deckert placing fourth in the three-lap Folkestone Aero Trophy at 155.5 mph behind a BA Swallow, Tipsy B and the late great Ranald Porteous in Chilton G-AFSV. Wonderful pictures!
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Re Chilton
You may have noticed in earlier posts that my old man used to work as a designer for Chilton at their mansion (Ward's mansion) near Hungerford.
Below Rapide G-AGHI late 1940s, UK. And a wrecked DC-2 ZS-DFW photographed in Sudan 1955 during Crop Culture trials. |
Miles Magister G-AJGM
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DH Swallow
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Love that South African DC-2 scan
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Pink Harrier, would you happen to know at which Wollongong airport that 1950 photo was taken, please?
G'day ;) |
Re: Hatfield photo - the houses in Hatfield Garden Village are still there, the rest is all gone... :(
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Just chanced upon this thread...that Chilton Olympia glider had it's first flight on the exact day the Moley was emerging, mewling and puking no doubt, into the brave new post-war world.... I share my birthday with an aircraft!! And it's a lot prettier than I am, too.
Photos are splendid....very evocative. |
To Feather: Albion Park, Wollongong.
Somewhere in England 1947 ex Lindberg Mohawk http://www.rcyachts.net/oziom/Leica/...947-shrunk.jpg |
Magister G-AJGM
PH
Reckon that's Redhill Aerodrome. Taken looking East from the hangars at the top end of the N-S runway. AB |
What is the tandem engined seaplane in the right background. It looks a bit German.
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Fareastdriver,
Looks like a Sea Otter with another one behind it. It was the successor to the Walrus. |
I can see two Sea Otters and two Walrus but more interestingly what's that fuselage section on the trailer, a DH Flamingo?
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VX276
Looks like a York
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Don't think it's a York, the fuselage section isn't square enough and the wing/fuselage join isn't in the right position. IMHO. Also are the window openings the correct shape?
I would say Flamingo is closer in section/size. |
Looking at the wing profile, is whatever it is upside down?
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Anson VH-BFN Albion Park Wollongong NSW. Nov 1950
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Best thread for some time. Thanks for showing some interesting aircraft and nostalgia rules! :)
http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/n...24at105323.jpg Similar? |
Certainly..........!!
AJJ's BCA vol II lists G-AFYF, YJ, YK and YL as scrapped at Redhill in 1950. G-AFYH was scrapped in 1954. What a shame it could not have hung on until the "preservation age". Significant aeroplane as it was the first all metal aircraft built by deH. G-INFO shows the Mohawk as destroyed in November 1950, so all quite feasible. The Mohawk then went on its 35 year exile in Spain. Great to see the a/c rebuilt but can't help feeling it might be more appropriate in the "Miles Museum" at Woodley rather than Hendon. Planemike |
More Flamingo shots, presumably all G-AFYH
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Great shots.........thanks for sharing.
Just a thought/question. Wonder why these five aircraft did not see more use, as Britain was short of transport a/c just after the war? Planemike |
Was it pressurised? I notice the windows are more rounded than the later Comet 1.
Just Binged this..... "However, the de Havilland Aircraft Company had made perhaps the earliest jet airliner study of a twin de Havilland Goblin engine powered Flamingo in mid 1941. These early designs were drawn round the de Havilland Goblin centrifugal jet engine developing some 1360kg static thrust." Oh the if's but's and probablies! :) |
Fascinating pictures. I rather like the look of the Flamingo. Were they not used by the RAF during the war having been put into service ?
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Asymmetric ?
The last Flamingo shot from PinkHarrier seems to show the starboard engine's propeller feathered, leading to the (jocular) query that the reason for the aircraft being knee deep in daisies, or at least long grass, was its inability to taxi ...
PS: Well, anybody can speculate about amost anything aeronautical, this being Pprune ... :D:D Nice shots anyway of an aircraft I've always been surprised that deH's didn't proceed with - "seemed a good idea at the time" ??? |
Air Rhodesia B720 at Salisbury
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