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Nanchang CJ-6A, G-BVVG June 14, 2009

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Nanchang CJ-6A, G-BVVG

It would be perhaps wrong to describe this Chinese trainer as ‘universal’, but with over 10,ooo built it is, indeed, popular. Despite appearances, it is not a direct copy of the Yak-18A, but has been extensively re-engineered to suit Chinese requirements by the Nanchang Aircraft Manufacturing Company. The prototype first flew on August 27, 1958, and entered PLAAF service in 1960, followed by over 3,000 examples for the Chinese armed forces. Since then, it has been exported to Albania, Bangladesh, Cambodia, North Korea, Tanzania, Sri Lanka and Zambia. Powered by a Nanchang Huosai-6JIA radial engine of 285hp, the CJ-6A is heavily reliant on pneumatics to operate flaps, brakes and start the engine. The control of various aircraft systems, such as the oil cooler and engine cooling gills are all manual, so there is a lot to manage during any flight.

The example seen here, G-BVVG, is  parked at the GVFWE, Kemble and is in typical PLAAF markings. It was on the French register for a while, from 1999 to 2002, but is now owned by the Nanchang CJ6A Group of Marlow; prior to this it had been operated by the amazingly-named ‘Peeking Duck Group’ of Bracknell !

A very popular ‘warbird’, the CJ-6A is now being released in batches by the Chinese authorities, and several specialist companies in the USA are currently importing and overhauling these aircraft for re-sale.

Folland (Hawker Siddeley) Gnat June 3, 2009

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Folland Gnat T.1
Folland Gnat T.1

Kemble Airfield has many interesting residents. The local aviation company, Delta Jets, is better known for it’s fleet of Hawker Hunters, but it also owns this Hawker Siddeley Gnat T.1, XP502. Currently, the Gnat is located on the old airfield ’signal square’ , a relic of the early days of flying, when a pilot would join the circuit overhead, and look down at the square, to see which runway was in use (shown by means of black ‘dumbell’ markers) and even confirm WHERE he was (the two-letter code for Kemble, KM, is still there). XP502 is in spurious ‘Red Arrows’ markings, to commemorate the fact that Kemble was the home of the ‘Reds’ for nearly 15 years, from 1969 to 1983; the last four years of which had seen the Gnats supplanted by the BAe Hawk. Indeed, the Postmaster at nearby Cirencester still sometimes gets mail addressed to ‘The Red Arrows, RAF Kemble’ – it is carefully forwarded to their present home at RAF Scampton.

The Gnat was designed by W.E.W. ‘Teddy’ Petter and was the outgrowth of another Folland design, the lightweight fighter known as the Folland Midge. Although neither the Midge nor the single-seat Gnat were adopted by the Royal Air Force, a development, the two-seat Fo.144 Gnat Trainer, was finally ordered on the 7th January, 1958 as the Hawker Siddekey Gnat T.1 (the Folland concern having been taken over by Hawker Siddeley in 1959), and intended as an advanced trainer to lead into the English Electric Lightning, yet another aircraft which had been designed by W.E.W. Petter!
XP502 was the very first Gnat to enter service with No 4 Flying Training School (7th November, 1962; construction number FL.517), and served with this unit until 1978. Withdrawn from use, it became an instructional airframe at RAF St Athan in South Wales, before, finally, being auctioned off.
The Gnat proved to be a highly manoeuvrable aircraft, and the ‘Reds’ predecessors, the ‘Yellowjacks’ showed just how suitable it was for display flying. Many of the Gnats used by the ‘Red Arrows’ had the infamous ‘Fuse 13′ modification, whereby that particular fuse was removed, to allow maximum roll rate via the ailerons. This gave rise to the famous Gnat ‘twinkle roll’ . The ‘Fuse 13′ modification was rescinded in 1972.
Gnats are regularly seen on the European air show circuit, as a popular ‘jet warbird’, but were also the ’stars’ of a 1991 feature film, ‘Hot Shots’, a parody of ‘Top Gun’! The film, which showed the Gnats painted as US Navy aircraft, featured Charlie Sheen and Lloyd Bridges.

M-Gator and R-Gator – the way forward April 13, 2009

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R-Gator in Iraq

M-Gator in Iraq

 

If nothing else, the security of airfields, commercial buildings, industrial plant, and military bases has come under increasing threat in the last few years. How to meet those threats, without exposing security or other personnel to increased risk, has become a major problem.

John Deere, the well known manufacturer of tractors and agricultural equipment, has come up with an elegant solution. They have taken one of the members of their Gator series of off-road vehicles, and turned it into a most effective military re-supply and utility machine.

The M-Gator, as it is known, is powered by an efficient 3-cylinder diesel engine and has already seen service with the US Marine Corps in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as being used by Canadian Armed Forces in the later country. There is a litter support frame fixed to the vehicle hood, and as well as evacuating casualties, the Gator is a nimble off-road supply vehicle in rough country. 

However, the story does not stop there. The Gator has now been turned into an autonomous UGV (Unmanned Ground Vehicle), the R-Gator. The R-Gator can be controlled by an operator, remotely, or programmed to follow a pre-arranged path to and from a target location, carrying many types of loads – it can, of course, be driven normally by the flick of a switch.  The R-Gator is equipped with a range of sensors, which enables it to act as a silent sentinel on military reservations, large industrial plants and other high value targets, yet retain a patrol facility.

Here you can see an M-Gator being loaded onto a USAF C-130 Hercules aircraft at Sather Air Base, Iraq on its way to Basra.

This vehicle, especially in its R-Gator form, has an exceptionally bright future ahead. It is an idea who’s time has come.

http://www.deere.com/en_US/contractsales/fedmilitarysales/cce/r_gator/r_gator.html

 

Image courtesy of Wikipedia: -

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/6d/M-Gator.jpg/180px-M-Gator.jpg&imgrefurl=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Deere_Gator&usg=__NJiHG0iHc-M8TKd-Rc3qPTHjB7Y=&h=120&w=180&sz=8&hl=en&start=33&tbnid=QIKZHe3R6VTcGM:&tbnh=67&tbnw=101&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dr-gator%26gbv%3D2%26ndsp%3D20%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN%26start%3D20

Date for GVFWE 2009, 9th/10th May – Kemble Airfield March 30, 2009

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Great Vintage Flying Weekend

Great Vintage Flying Weekend

The Great Vintage Flying Weekend had come to be a ‘fixture’ on the UK air show scene, that is until 2008. With the retirement of Terry Booker (Operations Director, and the man responsible for much of the excellent organisation behind the events), the event fell into a kind of stasis. Without an injection of capital, and a permanent new home (GVFWE had been a moveable feast), it was likely that Europe’s premier vintage aviation event would simply cease to exist.

With a great deal of goodwill, and some complex negotiations, it was announced just after Christmas that the event would be moving to Kemble Airfield (EGBP), the former RAF Kemble, which had once been home to the Red Arrows. The home of the highly-regarded Kemble Air Day, the Cotswold airfield had already been used before by GVFWE and was therefore a known quantity in organizational terms.

http://www.gvfwe.co.uk/

Here you can find the link for the new, official, GVFWE site; a major departure from the established pattern will be a one hour flying display to be inserted into the daily programme of events. I can safely say that everyone involved is really looking forward to a splendid 2009 event.

As an indication of the many different aircraft types which can appear at GVFWE, here is a photograph from the last Hullavington event. You can see examples of the following; Bucker Bu131 Jungmann, Miles M.38 Messenger, Auster AOP 9, Tipsy Belfair, D H 82a Tiger Moth, Chrislea CH3 Super Ace 2, Druine D.31 Turbulent, and Druine D.62B Condor .

The feisty Fennec – a fiercer fox March 24, 2009

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North American T-28S Fennec

North American T-28S Fennec

In the late 1950s, with war raging in Algeria, French forces needed a close-support aircraft urgently. Their light strike aircraft being used in North Africa (in what would now be called a COIN role) included large numbers of  the T-6G Texan. This aircraft had been upgraded, fitted with underwing gun pods and thrown into the fray. Standard French operating procedure was to use a pilot and an observer in the Texan on missions. This left the aircraft slow, underarmed and very vulnerable.

Two North American Nomads (civilianized versions of the T-28A) were purchased by the French for test purposes, quickly followed by 146 ex-USAF T-28A Trojans. These primary trainers were handed over to Sud Aviation at St. Nazaire, who oversaw the rebuilding of the machines; this included fitting standard French radio gear, armour protection for the engine and crew, and additional underwing hardpoints. The aircraft lost their 800hp R-1300 Cyclone engines, and were upgraded with a Wright R-1820-76B putting out 1425hp (these were sourced through Pac-Aero, who had produced the Nomad conversions). The aircraft was named Fennec, after the swift, cunning desert fox of North Africa, and the designation changed to T-28S; first flight took place on 10 March 1960, with each aircraft conversion taking approximately two months.

The war in Algeria was being fought over rugged mountain terrain, as well as in urban settings, and the Fennec suited the task. As well as being faster, more powerful, with extra armour protecting the engine and crew, the armament fit included a mix of  .50 calibre Browning machine pods, SNEB rocket packs, 87mm rockets, napalm containers and ‘iron’ bombs.

The Fennec seen here is based at the Imperial War Museum, Duxford, and is one of only two T-28 aircraft in the country. It was originally built by North American in 1951 (51-7545) as a T-28A, but was converted as the 119th Fennec. It carries the markings of one of the French light strike units (Escadrilles d’Aviation Legere d’Appui) EALA 7/72 ‘Fennec’ of the Armee de L’Air. Eventually, this example was disposed of to the Haitian Air Force, where it served until 1978. After a time on the US civil register, it was bought by Radial Revelation Inc, of Wilmington Delaware, and shipped to the UK, under management of The Aircraft Restoration Company.

This aircraft carries nose art, as ‘Little Rascal’, and the badge of 7/72, appropriately a fennec under the moon, under the cockpit. This feisty fox has been described as ‘a poor man’s Hurricane’; indeed, when the Fennecs were withdrawn to Metropolitan France after the Algerian War was over in 1962, they were issued to training and secondline defence units, and it is a matter of record that a Fennec claimed a ‘kill’ on an ‘opposing’ Dassault Mirage IIIC during air exercise ‘Carte Blanche’ in 1963!

‘Little Rascal’  is a fine performer on the European air show scene, and is shown here parked in the warbirds section at the GVFWE, Hullavington. A splendid conversion of an already successful type.

Staaken Flitzer Z-21A – ‘If the name’s German, the engine’s German, and it looks German, it must be…German’ (Captain Edmund Blackadder’s Theory of Aeronautics) March 20, 2009

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Staaken
Staaken Flitzer Z-21A – ‘If the name’s German, the engine’s German, and it looks German, it must be…German’ (Captain Edmund Blackadder’s Theory of Aeronautics)

In this case, (as in most cases), the esteemed Captain Blackadder has it wrong. Despite the name, the motive power, and the ’sit’ of the aircraft, it is actually a product of the fertile brain of the British aviation artist and designer Lynn Williams. It must be admitted that the ’round-tailed’ version of this PFA-approved kit ‘plane looks like something you would have found on the flight-line of some unit or other of the Deutsche Luftstreitkrafte during World War One. The Flitzer may be operated safely from small grass strips (provided they are level) and the relatively light weight (750lbs, maximum loaded weight) gives its modified Aerovee VW engine, driving a traditional wooden propeller, the chance to provide a sprightly performance for such a small unit (the aircraft will also take the 4-cylinder Jabiru 2200).

One of the most unusual aspects of the design is the way in which it keeps evolving. There is a square-tailed version (which looks remarkably like a Gloster Gamecock from certain angles), a ’sports’ model with a cut-down fuselage and an engine bolted directly to the firewall (does away with engine bearers), and a strengthened model to take a radial engine.    Also ‘in the works’ is the Flitzer Z-2 Schwalbe (Swallow), a touring two-seater, designed to take the classic flat-four engines of between 80 and 110 hp, or the Australian Rotec R2800 7-cylinder radial (unfortunately, the later engine appears to be experiencing more than its fair share of devlopemental problems). This should be very popular with the ‘replica crowd’.
Flitzers can also have their moments of excitement of the wrong type, however. G-FLIZ, had an ‘interesting’ arrival at RAF Lossiemouth, when the pilot probably encountered a gust on landing, dug the propeller and right wingtip in, and ended up inverted. The aircraft can lose height fairly quickly with power off.
Here you can the see the impressive G- ERIW, built and flown by Rupert Wasey, being admired by the crowd at GVFWE, Keevil. It is powered by the 80hp Aerovee conversion, driving a handsome Alan Newton beechwood propeller.
If you wish to build a Flitzer, buy a set of plans, then consult with our old friend Dudley Patterson of the Swindon Aircraft Timber Company (he usually attends GVFWE in G-DUDZ, his Avions Pierre Robin DR 400/180). Dudley will sell you a complete kit of wooden pieces for all the major components of whichever Flitzer version you are contemplating.
Oh, and it would appear that the blog has now reached the 2,000 tag mark!

A faster dragon………… February 20, 2009

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A faster dragon.....
A faster dragon…..

Edward Hillman had built a economical charter and scheduled airline business using the safe, affordable De Havilland DeH 84 Dragon – the Dragon had arisen because Hillman’s DeH 80A Puss Moth wasn’t big enough, and he negotiated with the company for a ‘twin-engined Puss Moth’. What he needed now, in the late 1930s was a ‘faster Dragon’. Enter the Dragon Six (sometimes called the Dragon Rapide, and later just Rapide) with its Gipsy Major 6 engines of  200hp, and capable of carrying eight passengers, it was an instant success in the civil market. There was military interest too, with light bomber varients being used during the Spanish Civil War, and sold to smaller nations such as Lithuania. The Royal Air Force needed radio and crew trainers, as well as communications and air ambulance machines. The Dragon Rapide put on ‘warpaint’ and became the Dominie T.1, the vast majority of them being built by Brush Coachworks, at Loughborough in Leicestershire. G-AGTM was one of these, built in 1944 and originally bearing the RAF serial NF875.

Postwar, it was sold to the Iraq Petroleum Transport Company Ltd, and was used around the Middle East, as many other Rapides were, on general oil support and communications work (the aircraft was on the Jordanian register as JY-ACL). Brought back to the UK, G-ATGM was used by the Army Parachute Association to support their activities, and wore a very attractive colour scheme, which included an oversize Parachute Regiment badge on the nose, and the name ‘Valkyrie’. Next came a move to the Imperial War Museum, Duxford for pleasure flying, and another re-paint. This time the aircraft wore an all-silver Royal Navy colour scheme, and markings for HMS  Hornbill, Royal Naval Air Station Culham, in Oxfordshire. The aircraft operator, whilst at Duxford, was Russavia, the brainchild of the late, and sadly missed, Mike Russell.
Finally acquired by Air Atlantique’s Historic Flight, the aircraft is now serviced and maintained in superb condition, being fitted with DeH Gipsy Queen 3 engines driving Fairey Reed propellers.  The aircraft is used, in the main, for specialist charters and air show work. She is seen here, safely housed in one of the WW2 hangars at Hullavington during GVFWE (note the 621 Volunteer Gliding School Viking T Mk 1 glider in the background). At an age when most people think of retirement, ‘Tango Mike’ is just getting her second wind – underneath her wings!

Spanish? German? Sperman?? Another aviation mash-up….. February 7, 2009

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Bucker Jungmann
Bucker Jungmann

When the fledgling Luftwaffe needed a primary trainer with aerobatic capability, it chose the new firm of Bucker Flugzeugbau GmbH and its Swedish chief designer, Anders Anderson, to build it. What emerged was a supremely agile biplane, with sharply raked wings. Thus the first Bu 131 Jungmann was born.

The ‘formula’ worked so well, that the Jungmann was built by the thousand for the  Luftsportverband (the pre-war civil flying clubs) and the A/B Flugschulen of the Luftwaffe; some were also issued direct to fighter Geschwaderen ( e.g. the famous 1/JG54 had one on charge) as liaison machines, rather like Magisters were issued to RAF Squadrons. During the Second World War, the Jungmann toiled away in the rear areas turning out Luftwaffe pilots, but as the tide turned against Germany, these trainers were armed with light bombs (of up to 2kgs each) and used as nuisance raiders at night on the Eastern Front , to harass the rear areas of the Red Army. Polikarpov Po-2 biplanes were performing a similar function for the Russian forces.
Production licences were acquired by Spain, Switzerland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Japan, with a variety of four cylinder in-line engines substituting for the German Hirth HM 60R (80hp) or HM 504A-2 (105hp).  Bu 131s were imported by Sweden, Yugoslavia, Finland, Romania, Brazil and Chile. The Jungmann was modified to take part in aerobatic championships postwar, and despite being up against Zlin and Yak aircraft built from the start for competition work, gave a good account of itself, despite not having such refinements as a lubrication system cabaple of running inverted.
  This example is of the CASA-built 1-131E Series 2000, produced post-war, and is owned by Mr Trevor Reed. The Jungmann has beautifully ‘crisp’ controls, and the Series 2000 came with a strengthened structure, an upgraded Spanish ENMA Tigre engine, generator, a stronger seven-rib rudder, and the luxury of an electric starter! This meant that the Spanish Air Force was happy to use this classic biplane until 1981, after which they were eagerly snapped up by ‘warbird’ collectors.
It is shown here, parked in the sun, at GVFWE, Hullavington.

100 and counting – so here is a WW2 classic to celebrate with! January 29, 2009

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Miles Magister

Miles Magister

Amazingly, I seem to have been around the circuit 100 times now – this is my 100th post – and so I could hardly be described as being on short finals anymore. Perhaps I should rename this thing ‘circuits and bumps’? Anyway, to mark this semi-auspicious landmark, I have chosen something used for ‘circuits and bumps’, the beautiful Miles M-14A Magister (ex Miles Hawk Trainer III). Developed from the Miles Trainer, and Miles Hawk Major (both used by the Royal Air Force), this handsome aircraft was used in numbers by the RAF from 1937, and was an ideal ‘lead-in’ to the world of the Hurricane and Spitfire, aircraft which many of their pilots would soon use in the Battle of Britain. Over 1,200 Magisters had been built by the time British production finally ceased in 1941.

As well as use their use by 16 Elementary Flying Schools, some Magisters were issued directly to fighter units as ’squadron hacks’. Indeed, one of these ‘Maggies’ was used to perform a most daring feat on 23 May 1940, when then-Flt Lt James Leathart of 74 Sqn, landed at Calais Mark airfield to pick up an officer who had been shot down, whilst his escort of Spitfire Mk1s fought off 12 attacking Me109s (the soon-to-be legendary Al Deere making his first kills in this combat). Flt Lt Leathart got clean away, after picking up the downed officer. For this amazing piece of flying he was awarded the DSO.

This ‘Maggie’ is one of the many converted after the Second World War for the civilian market, where they were known as the Hawk Trainer III (along with those built for civilian and non-RAF users).  Indeed, there is a chance that I might have seen this actual aircraft when it was with Air Schools Ltd (the forerunner of British Midland Airways) at Burnaston, Derby from 1953 to 1958.  Eventually extensively rebuilt as a Magister, this superb example of the breed, originally built in 1941, is seen here taxying at Hullavington during the GVFWE, its 130 hp De Havilland Gipsy Major 1 engine barely ticking over. This particular aircraft contains major components from at least two machines, and you have to admire the immense effort that went into the restoration to flying condition.

A little-known piece of Miles history is the production of Magisters in Turkey. The Turkish Air League founded a factory near Ankara, the T.H.K. Ucak Fabrikasi, which by 1949 was employing 1,200 people. Amongst other things, it was still producing Magisters under licence, as well as undertaking the overhaul and repair of their Gipsy Major engines. A total of one hundred Magisters were built for the Air League Schools and the Turkish Air Force. In 1946 T.H.K. were asked to produce a special version of the Maggie capable of  spraying DDT. The front cockpit was faired over, and the area formerly  occupied by the seat was fitted with a tank, pulverizer, pump and atomisers. These aircraft were operated under the direction of the Turkish Ministry of Hygiene, who waged a campaign against a particular mosquito species Anopheles sacharovi (the Anophelid which is the principal vector for malaria in that region). I dare say that this is the ONLY time a Magister fought a Mosquito  – and won!

P-51D-20NA Mustang December 10, 2008

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P51D Mustang

P51D Mustang

 The P-51D was probably the most effective fighter of WW2. A marriage made in heaven, of an advanced airframe with the superb RR Merlin engine, gave the Allies a magnificent escort fighter, able to reach Berlin from bases in East Anglia, and battle late model Me109 and FW190 aircraft in their own backyard.  Early versions of the Merlin-powered P-51B, for example, had only 4 x .50 calibre Browning machinguns; the P-51D had 6  ’fifties’, and this became the standard US fighter armament well into the Korean War. This lovely example is owned by Peter Teichman (based at North Weald, with the Hangar 11 collection) and carries the typical late war scheme of polished natural metal, invasion stripes and flamboyant personal decoration! Another excellent job from the team at Hangar 11.