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Leopoldoff Colibri – romantic, obscure, and very French (or is that, Russian?) March 16, 2009

Posted by shortfinals in Aviation, British Isles, England, France, Great Vintage Flying Weekend, Second World War, aircraft.
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Colibri
Leopoldoff L.7 Colibri

Sometimes you find something that surprises you – immensely. It is rather like panning for gold, and coming up with a huge, rough diamond. At Abingdon, during an early phase of the GVFWE event, I came across this pretty aircraft; it was rather like some Malagasy fishermen hauling up their nets and finding a coelcanthe (Latimeria chalumnae).

The genesis of the Leopoldoff is shrouded in the mists of the Bolshevik Revolution. It is said that the plans of the original aircraft were drawn up prior to 1917 by E.T.S. Leopoldoff, who, when the Imperial Russian regime fell, hurriedly left the country. Like many other Russian emigres, he ended up in Paris (French had been the preferred language of the Imperial Court, and most of the Russian aristocracy). There, the Russian community scratched out a living as best they could; some were shopkeepers, some salesmen, and some, as in Leopoldoff’s case, became taxi drivers. He finally persuaded a French company to build a prototype to his drawings, which flew in September, 1933. Progress was slow, with the first production machine appearing in 1937. Minor variations gave rise to changes in designation, with the main version being the L.3. Leopoldoff had formed his own company by now (Societe des Avions Leopoldoff), which undertook to build this pretty aircraft as a two seater for club or touring purposes. Just over 30 aircraft were produced before the Second World War broke out.

The L.7 Colibri (named after a genus of hummingbird) is a post-war modification of an L.3. The original aircraft would have been fitted with a Salmson 9Adb radial engine of 45hp, leaving it rather underpowered. Instead, the L.7 now has the ubiquitous Continental Motors Corporation A65-8S engine, of  65hp, driving a wooden Sensenich W72CK propeller – a much better proposition. You can just make out that the L.7 is a sesquiplane (or unequal span biplane). Some Leopoldoff aircraft were  ‘normal’ biplanes, and you can see that this has given rise to an odd appearance. The attachment points for the interplane struts on the upper wing have stayed the same, which means the struts now make an acute angle with the shorter, lower wing. Note the pronounced wing dihedral. There are echoes of WW1 aircraft in this design; indeed, one of the few examples still extant (in the collection of L’Amicale Jean-Baptiste Salis, at La Ferte-Alais in France) is painted in German WW1 markings.

Post-war, six more aircraft were built in Morocco by Societe des Constructions Aeronautiques du Maroc, and one of these made a noteworthy flight on the 3rd July 1948, when it successfully completed a 600km course as part of an aviation rally organised by the Aviation Federation of Morocco. The Leopoldoff (powered by a Salmson radial) landed safely back at Rabat, where the crew of Dr Saugnes and M J Rousseau were greeted by the Resident General de la France au Maroc, General Juin and Prince Moulay Hassan. It was the smallest aircraft in the rally, and had no special navigation instruments!

This L.7 is the only one on the British register, and was owned by D’Arcy Aviation in the 1970s (it had been on the French register, at one stage, as F-PCZX). It is now in the capable hands of Mr William Cooper. Long may she grace British skies.

Yes, I know, I know, it’s ANOTHER An-2……. February 3, 2009

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An-2, D-FKMA

An-2, D-FKMA

I may have said this before but I REALLY like the An-2. The ‘Anushka’ is big, bold and burly….and makes a statement on the flightline. Thanks to the German Air Force, who declined this PZL-built former LSK (Luftstreitkrafte) East German machine (LSK-440), it came onto the open market. Here seen in the markings of ‘Aero Troika’ on the flightline at GVFWE Abingdon, it is now operated by Flight Training Cologne, and gives pleasure flights, mostly operating out of its home base. This An-2T (nicknamed ‘Anna’) was not built – at Mielec in Poland –  to any agreed international civilian standard, so the CAA would have a problem with allowing that kind of operation in the UK.

I went inside this aircraft and found it typical of the breed. The cockpit had an almost ‘agricultural’ feel to it; almost like a flying tractor – and about as tough, too! Difficult to think of this as being in any way belligerent, but, during the Vietnamese War, some North Vietnamese An-2s were fitted with two torpedoes slung underneath their wing, in an attempt to attack South Vietnamese coastal shipping. One of these North Vietnamese An-2s was shot down by an F-4 Phantom, under the control of USS Long Beach!

An English eccentric….. January 27, 2009

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What is it? A Wot, that's what!
What is it? A Wot, that’s what!

What is it? It’s a Currie Wot, that’s what!

Seen taxying along at the GVFWE, Abingdon, is a little gem. This a Currie Wot, a genuine 1930s British design, but built from plans under the auspices of the Popular Flying Association. Two Wots were built by Cinque Ports Aviation Ltd, at Lympne, in 1939, to the design of J R Currie. Unfortunately, both of these aircraft were lost in a raid by the Luftwaffe on Lympne Aerodrome, Kent on 15th August, 1940.  Ju87 Stukas of  II/StG 1 (escorted by Me109s) smashed the hangar containing the remaining aircraft of the Cinque Ports Flying Club – those that had not already been pulled back further inland – and the two Wots were destroyed by fire. 
A whole new batch of Wots were home-built following WW2 – this example being built by Ralph Hart between 1970 and 1973, in an apartment! It is powered by a Continental A65-8F of 65hp, and is a delight to fly. However, it can be tricky on the ground, and G-AYNA suffered a landing accident at Enstone, Oxfordshire, in 2002. Perhaps that is why this aircraft has changed hands no less than eight times. This aircraft has also been flown in a Shuttleworth Air Display, in 2007, by the Shuttleworth Collection’s Chief Pilot, Andy Sephton.
There is a certain ’sit’ to the aircraft which makes it resemble various WWI types, and many Wots have been either initially built, or later modified, to look like an SE5a. Indeed, Slingsby Aviation built a series of six, 7/8th scale, SE5a replicas for film work in 1967, and others are being modified.

So, what did Mr Piper do next? January 25, 2009

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L18C Super Cub
L18C Super Cub

After William Piper had wrested control of the Taylor Aircraft Co. from Clarence Taylor, (paying $761 at the bankruptcy sale for all the fixtures and fittings), what did he do, I hear you say? Well, the Piper concern built an aircraft that looked rather like a Taylorcraft, but with some differences. They were wildly successful as club and private aircraft in the United States, and like Henry Ford, who said you could have a car any colour you liked, so long as it was black – you could have any colour Cub you wanted, so long as it was yellow! The US Army liked them very much, and soon they began appearing in Olive Drab, in liaison roles, wherever the Army went. Following World War Two, just like the idea about the mousetrap, Piper built a better Cub. The Super Cub was strengthened and developed to take engines in the range of 130 to 150hp, but the US and other armed forces often decided to fit the lower-powered Continental C-90-12F, of 90hp, making the aircraft an L18C. This example is a former Koninklijke Luchmacht (Royal Netherlands Air Force) aircraft, built in 1952. Piper – and its many successor companies – continued to build these from 1949 to 1994 (with the occasional break) a most amazing production run. This one – G-BMLI, owned by Mr I MacKinnon - was an early arrival at GVFWE, Abingdon.

A Nottingham success story – via the USA! January 25, 2009

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Taylorcraft BL-65
Taylorcraft BL-65

In the 1920s two brothers from Nottingham ,Clarence and Gordon Taylor, left for the USA and better times. The brothers formed their own aircraft company to build a light, two-seat trainer and ‘club’ aircraft. Relocating to Ohio, from Rochester, NY, they were joined by an oilman, William Piper, who quickly engineered a take-over of the company for his own benefit. Piper later renamed the firm, and the rest is, as they say, history. Clarence Taylor (his brother having been killed flying one of their aircraft) was forced out, and went on to found a new company which became Taylorcraft. Always concentrating on two-seat, tandem, high-wing and fabric-covered machines, these products were in direct competition with the much-more aggressively marketed Piper Cub. Both designs were used extensively during WW2 – the BL-65 shown was known by the US Army as the L-2F – on such tasks as artillery observation, liasion, medical evacuation, etc.

G-BVRH was built in 1940, and is powered by a Lycoming O-145-B2, a 2.4 litre engine putting out about 65hp (the same engine as used in some Piper Cubs). There are no less than 257 BL-65 survivors on the US register. This aircraft is seen in the early morning mist at GVFWE, Abingdon, and you can see that the occupants have spent a rather damp night in a tent pitched on the port side of -RH, opposite some of the WW2-era hangars at the former RAF station. There is another, personal, connection for me in that the owner lives in Barry, South Glamorgan, a town where some of my family live.
Taylorcraft had a British subsidiary, British Taylorcraft, established at Thurmaston, near Leicester, in a former osier shed, which produced Taylorcraft aircraft for the British Army under the name of Auster – and the rest, as they say, is even MORE history!

A magnificent obsession – G-ADWT January 20, 2009

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Miles M.2W Hawk Trainer
Miles M.2W Hawk Trainer

In 1934, the Phillips and Powis Aircraft Co. produced yet another of their brillant series of Miles designs – the M.2W Hawk Trainer. Powered by the popular Gipsy Major 1c engine, this aircraft had prominent ‘trousered’ undercarriage legs. The company had a history of producing streamlined designs which delivered sparkling performance on not too much horsepower. The aircraft has been through many hands including being owned by the private Flying Club of No. 47 Squadron, RAF at Abingdon, who had achieved an excellent record flying the Handley Page Hastings during the Berlin Airlift, (carrying mostly coal!) and were in the process of transitioning to the Blackburn Beverley. G-ADWT was owned in the 1960s by a member of No. 3 Wing, RCAF, stationed at Zweibrucken,  Germany – this must have been a huge contrast for the pilots that flew her, for the wing was equipped at the time with CF-104 Starfighters!

Here we see this magnificent survivor, which has been the subject of a superb restoration, ready to depart GVFWE at Hullavington.

Auster mix and match – the J5R Alpine January 16, 2009

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Tailart on Auster J5 Alpine

Tail art on Auster J5R Alpine

We have seen that nose art has a long and distinguished history on military (and sometimes civil) aircraft. Here is a splendid example of artwork at the opposite end of an aircraft – tail art, no less.  This painting of a rhinoceros adorns a smartly turned-out example of the rare Auster J5R Alpine, owned by Richard Webber. During the 1950s a whole multitude of Auster varients were produced almost by a process of ‘mix and match’. In this case, you took the fuselage of an Auster Aiglet Trainer, the wings from a J-1 Autocrat, added a De Havilland Gipsy Major 10 engine (130hp) driving a Fairey Reed propeller, stirred it all about and, voila~ a J5R Alpine. Only ten of this variant were built, so this makes the survival from 1953 of G-ANXC something of a minor miracle. The aircraft has, at one time been on the Kenyan registry as 5Y-UBD – hence the rhino!

This was taken early one morning at GVFWE, Abingdon, Oxfordshire.

A Luton Minor is no minor thing…. December 28, 2008

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Luton L.A. 4A Minor

Luton L.A. 4A Minor

Looking every inch the 1930s design that it is – this Luton Minor is one of the post-war versions built from plans by members of the Popular Flying Association. I can honestly say that this machine has lashings of character, and it flies well – a testament to its builder, Robert Kirby, who completed this little gem in 1963. My dear friend Arthur Ord-Hume was one of the leading lights in the successful re-emergence of the design in the late 1950’s, and for that we are truly grateful. Fairly ’short-legged’ (range is around 180 miles), this Minor has turned up at PFA Rallies and the GVFWE on a regular basis, despite numerous changes of ownership. This particular Minor is powered by a modified Volkswagen 1600 engine. Here it appears as an early arrival at GVFWE Abingdon.

Close encounters of the balloon kind…. December 26, 2008

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Balloon over Abingdon

Balloon over Abingdon

Sometimes its necessary to SHARE airspace! Here we see a hot-air balloon over an industrial estate near Abingdon, UK. We were enjoying an early morning flight in a Chrislea CH.3 Super Ace.  Atmospheric conditions are at their best for ballooning either in the early morning or in the evening. Live and let live, I say!