Ahhhhhhhh so!
|
..... the Manchurian Manshū Hayabusa?
|
Originally Posted by fauteuil volant
(Post 10930263)
..... the Manchurian Manshū Hayabusa?
fauteuil volant has control. |
Thank you, Flightless Parrot. Here's something only marginally less ugly!
https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....57513fd5ef.jpg |
Looks similar to the U.S. built and designed General Aviation GA-43.
|
..... the Manchurian Manshü Hayabusa? Come to think of it though, it's on a par with Fairey naming their lumbering T.S.R.1 after the Swordfish. Now here's a vehicle that's worthy of the name - the Suzuki Hyabusa, the world's fastest production motorcycle: https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....642d87ec50.jpg The logo is a stylized version of the Han character for Peregrine Falcon: https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....f2898792c2.png https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzuki_Hayabusa |
Originally Posted by India Four Two
(Post 10930641)
What were they thinking, naming it after the Peregrine Falcon?
https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....b37d008982.png Nakajima Ki-43 The photograph is chosen to illustrate what they did before Photoshop. |
Indeed, evansb, but one would expect the aeroplane in the photograph to look like a GA-43 when it is a GA-43! Over to you, sir, assuming that you now have sufficient qualifying posts.
|
Not yet, but darn near.. regretfully OPEN HOUSE.
|
|
General Aircraft Monospar ST-18 Croydon?
|
They named an aircraft after Croydon? Well I'll go to the foot of our stairs...
|
21 minutes - before FV get it - hard to get a picture that didn't give it away I'm afraid - it was pretty distinctive. From Google:-
The General Aircraft ST-18 Croydon was a 1930s British cabin monoplane built by General Aircraft Limited (who were originally Croydon based).Following the mixed success of the earlier Monospar family of aircraft, the company designed a ten-seat light transport, the ST-18 (later named Croydon). Due to the longer-span wing, it was not a cantilever monospar wing but had to be fitted with bracing struts. The ST-18 was a low-wing monoplane, with a conventional tail unit and tailwheel landing gear, and hydraulically retractable main gear. It was powered by two Pratt & It was powered by two Pratt & Whitney Wasp Junior radial engines mounted on the wing leading edges. It had a crew of three, and a cabin for ten passengers, a toilet and baggage compartment.[1] On 16 November 1935, the sole aircraft (T22, later G-AECB) first flew at Hanworth Aerodrome, piloted by Harry M. Schofield. It performed well, but did not attract any orders, so the aircraft was prepared to establish a record for an Australia to England flight. On 30 July 1936, Lord Sempill, Harold "Tim" Wood, and two other crew left Croydon Airport for Australia. On 7 October 1936, during the return flight from Darwin, navigation errors occurred during the flight over the Timor Sea, and the aircraft made a successful forced landing on a coral reef (Seringapatam Reef). The crew members were immediately transported off the reef by local fishermen, and the aircraft was abandoned. https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....53f88ca803.jpg Our French based friend has the con...... |
... navigation errors occurred during the flight over the Timor Sea ... https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....288c20d03f.png |
Thank you, Asturias56. The Monospars are always distinctive in their forward areas because, unlike so many twins, the engine cowlings and the nose are broadly inline (rather than the former being aft of the latter).
Continuing with the use of cropping, here's an image that I've cropped to exclude this aeroplane's most distinctive feature. https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....19a0fe1fc3.jpg |
Here's an obscure clue. A later version of this aeroplane bore the same name as song written by Mickey Jupp!
|
That must be either
Pilot or Make it fly |
After some more searching I think that plane must be named:
“You ‘ll never get me up in one of those” I think the Tandem wing Taupin 12? |
"typewriter
Claggin' on Boxes & Tins all seem to fit................ |
Today I received this rather curious PM from Fauteuil Volant:
Good morning SLB For some reason unknown to me, someone unknown to me appears to have decided to deny me access to the Aviation History & Nostalgia Board (but not, curiously, the rest of the forum). For that reason I've not been able to respond to the posts, subsequent to my clue of yesterday, on the 'Name that Flying Machine' topic. Thus would you please do me a favour and, by way of a valedictory comment, post that the mystery aeroplane is the Peyret/SFCA Taupin and the Mickey Jupp song, offered as a clue, is 'Cross Country', the Taupin having been developed, post-war, as the Lignel 44 Cross Country. And if you'll do so, that will conclude my involvement with that topic and, in all probability, the PPRuNe forum. Regards Fauteuil Volant I do not know if there have been any or previous exchanges between the mods and Fauteuil. I do not want to start any discussion on that. I do hope that this is all some kind of error or mistake and that we may welcome back Fauteuil in the near future. My next challenge: https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....324798a0a.jpeg |
All times are GMT. The time now is 15:48. |
Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.