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When Hollywood Ruled The Skies - Volumes 1 through 4 by Bruce Oriss


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 5:00 pm 
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Well the "gun pod" on the front weighed a mere 200 pounds so that coupled with the camera crap hanging off of it did make it a little unstable, but like I said, Reynolds claimed it was fast. As for the "mock up cockpit" on the backlot of disney MGM studios, its 22" wider than the real helicopter due to the fact that they needed to be able to get the whole cockpit in the scene.


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 5:51 pm 
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"The Blue Thunder helicopter was originally an Aerospatiale SA341G Gazelle, built in 1973, and once flown by a coal mining company in the 1970s before Columbia Studios bought it. There were actually two Gazelles used in the Blue Thunder production, of course. After the movie wrapped, the first Gazelle was sold to an aviation salvage company in New Mexico, who leased it to a film company making the ABC TV mini-series Amerika (1987). Later, the salvager dismantled the machine for valuable spare parts. The second Gazelle is on display at MGM Studios in Florida (pictured in 2002), and can be seen on the backlot bus tour. It is in fairly poor condition." - NATHAN DECKER

OK Bill (or Scott)...... Which Coal Company owned it? Was it in WV? I had a client who was a former Army chopper pilot in Vietnam and there were a few companies with Gazelles in the early 1970's in WV. At that time there were so many turbine helicopters in Southern WV, it wasn't funny, they were everywhere. Now we have like 10 or so... Times change.

That came from this site (mod please fix the link, THANKS)

http://www.rotaryaction.com/pages/bluethunder.html

Mark H

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 6:05 pm 
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SA.341G; S/N 1066; Prod. Yr. 1973; temporary regd. F-WKQD to SNIAS; regd. 31/7/74 N57936 to Vought Helicopter Co.; regd. 2/10/74 N37LR to L.T. Ruth Coal Co.; sold to Kentucky Gem Coal Co. Inc. 10/10/74; purchased to Continental Flying Service, Inc. 19/11/76; regd. 17/12/76 same reg. to Continental Flying Service Inc.; 20/12/76 purchased to L.T. Ruth Coal Co.; reg. N37LR reserved 10/76; regd. 11/1/77 N37LR to L.T. Ruth Coal Co.; purchased 19/8/81 to Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc.; allocated experimental reg. 28/11/83 N51BT to Columbia Pictures; purchased 25/10/84 to Mr. Michael E. Grube; w/o 23/6/94; dismantled for parts; NOTES: a) during 1981 modified for movie requirements on 1704.7 total hours done by R.W. Martin, Inc. (Cinema Air); b) used as mod for film "Blue Thunder" and "Amerika" TV miniserial (pilot: Jim Gavin)

SA.341G; S/N 1075; Prod. Yr. 1973; regd. 7/8/73 N94494 to G. D. Turner (Vought Helicopters Co.); re-regd. 25/9/73 N94494 to N777GH Holley & Beck; regd. 2/3/77 to F.R.B.C. Leasing Co.; leased 14/3/77 to Mocomb Contracting Corp.; leased 29/9/80 to P. Bosco & Sons, Inc. (fmr. Mocomb Contr.); 17/8/81 purchased by F.R.B.C. Leasing Co. to Moceri Management Co.; purchased 19/8/81 to Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc.; allocated experimental reg. 16/11/81 N52BT to Columbia Pictures Inc.; regd. 21/3/86 same reg. to Mr. Michael E. Grube; Cof Reg. cancelled 16/8/88; dismantled (scrapped) for parts, w/o; NOTE: a) during 1981 modified as movie requirements by R.W. Martin, Inc. (Cinema Air)

http://www.gregdonner.org/blue_thunder/bt_movie.html

I would have edited the last post but it wouldn't let me.....

I kind of answered my own question here.......

Mark H

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 8:03 pm 
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Wow, didn't expect this thread to take-off as it has!!!
I thought both Blue Thunder Gazelle choppers were scrapped??
and the MGM Studios one is the mock-up.

Getting back to the original request though (to Quicksilvermustang),
what was the n-number and msn details of the choppers you
converted for Rambo III, is the Puma not the same one from
Rambo II?
Also, didn't RW Martin at Palomar covert the Blue Thunder machines
or are you the same company?

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 8:24 pm 
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RW Martin worked in conjuction with us, Martin actually just oversaw it. We designed, built and test flew the Rambo 3 choppers. As for N-numbers, im at a loss. This thread made me go through some of our pictures while building all of these (and I forgot the bastardized Bell 47 we made for the movie "Annie" I almost forgot those too) I will post some pictures tomorrow or the next day of all three of these projects from start to finish. Maybe the N numbers are on there maybe they aren't i'll look. That was quite a while ago so i dont think we still have the 337 forms for all of that or not. BTW the puma is NOT the same as the one in 2, I dont know anything about that.


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 8:31 pm 
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P51Mstg wrote:
SA.341G; S/N 1066; Prod. Yr. 1973; temporary regd. F-WKQD to SNIAS; regd. 31/7/74 N57936 to Vought Helicopter Co.; regd. 2/10/74 N37LR to L.T. Ruth Coal Co.; sold to Kentucky Gem Coal Co. Inc. 10/10/74; purchased to Continental Flying Service, Inc. 19/11/76; regd. 17/12/76 same reg. to Continental Flying Service Inc.; 20/12/76 purchased to L.T. Ruth Coal Co.; reg. N37LR reserved 10/76; regd. 11/1/77 N37LR to L.T. Ruth Coal Co.; purchased 19/8/81 to Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc.; allocated experimental reg. 28/11/83 N51BT to Columbia Pictures; purchased 25/10/84 to Mr. Michael E. Grube; w/o 23/6/94; dismantled for parts; NOTES: a) during 1981 modified for movie requirements on 1704.7 total hours done by R.W. Martin, Inc. (Cinema Air); b) used as mod for film "Blue Thunder" and "Amerika" TV miniserial (pilot: Jim Gavin)

SA.341G; S/N 1075; Prod. Yr. 1973; regd. 7/8/73 N94494 to G. D. Turner (Vought Helicopters Co.); re-regd. 25/9/73 N94494 to N777GH Holley & Beck; regd. 2/3/77 to F.R.B.C. Leasing Co.; leased 14/3/77 to Mocomb Contracting Corp.; leased 29/9/80 to P. Bosco & Sons, Inc. (fmr. Mocomb Contr.); 17/8/81 purchased by F.R.B.C. Leasing Co. to Moceri Management Co.; purchased 19/8/81 to Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc.; allocated experimental reg. 16/11/81 N52BT to Columbia Pictures Inc.; regd. 21/3/86 same reg. to Mr. Michael E. Grube; Cof Reg. cancelled 16/8/88; dismantled (scrapped) for parts, w/o; NOTE: a) during 1981 modified as movie requirements by R.W. Martin, Inc. (Cinema Air)

http://www.gregdonner.org/blue_thunder/bt_movie.html

I would have edited the last post but it wouldn't let me.....

I kind of answered my own question here.......

Mark H



Well to add on to this, (its Scott btw Mark, my dad can barely turn a computer on) I dont know where they came from except when the filming was over the chopper was sold stripped to the next company.

Another thing that I havent found anywhere but when they interviewed my dad about designing and building the blue thunder helicopter, they asked what was the main factor that insipered the design. He said the Apache was....it was about the time they lost one of the prototypes (I think it was the second prototype built but dont quote me).


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 26, 2009 4:06 am 
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Hi, I'm still keen to see these photos when you get a chance.
Cheers

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 26, 2009 8:16 am 
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How was it the BT cockpit got to be used in "Firefox" where some of the Hind scenes occur over the ice flow? I've always been curious about that since "Firefox" was released a year or so before BT was.



quicksilvermustang wrote:
Well the "gun pod" on the front weighed a mere 200 pounds so that coupled with the camera crap hanging off of it did make it a little unstable, but like I said, Reynolds claimed it was fast. As for the "mock up cockpit" on the backlot of disney MGM studios, its 22" wider than the real helicopter due to the fact that they needed to be able to get the whole cockpit in the scene.


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 26, 2009 3:37 pm 
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Quote:
How was it the BT cockpit got to be used in "Firefox" where some of the Hind scenes occur over the ice flow? I've always been curious about that since "Firefox" was released a year or so before BT was.


Blue Thunder was filmed early 1982 but it wasn't released until April
1983, I don't know why - special effects, pick-up shots maybe?
Firefox was released late 1982, so the BT mock-up would have been
avaliable for the Firefox crew from mid-'82.

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 26, 2009 4:04 pm 
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"Firefox" was released in mid '82. May or June, IIRC. Of course, it wasn't til after BT that I realized that was the helo cockpit in those scenes.


Simon Beck wrote:
Quote:
How was it the BT cockpit got to be used in "Firefox" where some of the Hind scenes occur over the ice flow? I've always been curious about that since "Firefox" was released a year or so before BT was.


Blue Thunder was filmed early 1982 but it wasn't released until April
1983, I don't know why - special effects, pick-up shots maybe?
Firefox was released late 1982, so the BT mock-up would have been
avaliable for the Firefox crew from mid-'82.


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 26, 2009 4:49 pm 
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BT was shot Jan. to April '82 so Firefox must have got it
straight away for their June release.

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 26, 2009 7:11 pm 
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the special effects were put in later i believe, i dont know much about those, im scaning 150 pics of blue thunder and rambo helos as well as other old warbird restorations we did long ago. they'll be up soon


SY


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 26, 2009 7:32 pm 
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Ok here's at least some pics



I helped a little bit

Image

Image

little known fact: these are cessna 337 outer wings

Image

Image

making the nose cone

Image

I had to test it out for myself

Image

Image

It flys!

Image

still looking for the puma construction pics but heres the finishing ones

Image

Image

tubular mount for a night sun spotlight

Image

Image

heading to isreal for filming
Image

the finished Rambo 3 helos
Image


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 26, 2009 8:11 pm 
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Brilliant job on those conversions!!!, the film company
must have been stoked when they saw them.

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Fairchild C-82 Packet: The Military and Civil History (2017)


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 26, 2009 9:30 pm 
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now for Blue thunder

this is what we started with

Image

Image

this taxied by dad's hangar one day and it inspired his design, note the #2, thats the second prototype apache that crashed a short while after this photo

Image

Image

movie mock up cockpit
Image

Image

Image

it flys, note the #2 on the side in honor of the fallen apache
Image


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