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Re: The Unusual type for the Unusual type

Fri Jun 08, 2012 4:39 pm

[quote="Mark Allen M"]Couldn't think of a catchy title this morning so this will have to do :wink: So have at it you Aviation scholarly type, educate me. What are we looking at and what's the story on a few of these?

XF6F-4
Image
Caption: Fred Hopscotch, and unassuming tech-Rep wonders to himself "How in the H E double Tooth Picks am I supposed to get on this Big Gas Bird? I can't possibly reach that first foot step without a boost."
"

Re: The Unusual type for the Unusual type

Fri Jun 08, 2012 4:40 pm

Mark Allen M wrote:Now that's interesting, Thx Peter and Inspector, good stuff as usual :D And trust me I can find most of this information as well if I spend the time searching but I like what you guys come up with better. Great job of educating me for free. haha

You're welcome... I just hope I have my facts straight!

And I know what you mean about finding this info... I used to spend entirely too much time scouring the net and digging through books and rags, usually to help some fellow modelers and wing-nuts. But burn-out hit fast and hard, and I now gots-me an interminable case of the lazees.


I also used to run some ID quizzes on a few forums, so... here's a couple more 'unusual' types for folks to identify. Shouldn't be too hard with this crowd...

Image

Image


Fade to Black...

Re: The Unusual type for the Unusual type

Fri Jun 08, 2012 6:13 pm

Peter-Four-Oh wrote:

I also used to run some ID quizzes on a few forums, so... here's a couple more 'unusual' types for folks to identify. Shouldn't be too hard with this crowd...

Image

Image


Fade to Black...


Skoda Kauba V4
and SL-6

Re: The Unusual type for the Unusual type

Fri Jun 08, 2012 6:19 pm

The B-17 "The Last Straw" was part of the flight that landed during the Pearl Harbor attack. Later served in Australia.

Steve

Re: The Unusual type for the Unusual type

Fri Jun 08, 2012 7:13 pm

gary1954 wrote:Image

Man is that one Fug-Ugly airframe....British or French? Brits built a lot of Fug-Ugly aeroplanes

Tsk, tsk, Gary, as has been said, French. :wink: The rule of thumb (which has exceptions) is post 1930s, stripes on the rudder, French, stripes on the fin, British. The French also helpfully wrote the name and designation and weight on the rudder stripes, too. :rolleyes:

Have to say, that's a thing I've never seen before, and I want one, now. Something about the wood inlay* engine cowls...

Regards,


*Joke.

Re: The Unusual type for the Unusual type

Fri Jun 08, 2012 7:31 pm

shrike wrote:Skoda Kauba V4
and SL-6

I knew they'd be too easy... :lol:


Fade to Black...

Re: The Unusual type for the Unusual type

Fri Jun 08, 2012 8:34 pm

shrike wrote:
Peter-Four-Oh wrote:

I also used to run some ID quizzes on a few forums, so... here's a couple more 'unusual' types for folks to identify. Shouldn't be too hard with this crowd...

Image

Image
Good eye Shrike!! For some reason the SKODA logo wasn't hitting the switch earlier- :supz:

Fade to Black...


Skoda Kauba V4
and SL-6

Re: The Unusual type for the Unusual type

Sat Jun 09, 2012 11:32 am

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Last edited by Mark Allen M on Fri Aug 31, 2012 12:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Re: The Unusual type for the Unusual type

Sat Jun 09, 2012 12:21 pm

I'll open,
#6 Leduc 0.21/22
#7 here mounted on a Bloch MB 161 Languedoc
BLOCH MB 161 again
A Heinkel He-277 (!!) now that's a rarea avius
The big boat is Latecoere L. 631 Lionel de Marmier
The Air France airliner is a Breguet 763 Provence (one of it's several nom de plume)
the last one is the piston powered version of the NC- 1071, the NC-1070. unofficially known as the 'sacre -merde' :rofl: :rofl: :rofl:

Re: The Unusual type for the Unusual type

Sat Jun 09, 2012 1:47 pm

The Inspector wrote:...A Heinkel He-277 (!!) now that's a rarea avius...



Although very similar in layout, I think you'll find that the "mother ship" is actually one of the two He 274 prototypes (rather than He 177B/277 prototype). Both 274s were used for high-altitude work and as test-launch platforms by the French after the war.

Both broken up in 1953. If only... :(


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinkel_He_274

Re: The Unusual type for the Unusual type

Sat Jun 09, 2012 2:09 pm

#2, the sort of F-84-ish jet is the SNCASO SO 4050 Vulture.
Thanx for the clarification Dan 8)

Re: The Unusual type for the Unusual type

Sat Jun 09, 2012 4:43 pm

Arsenal VB.10

Image


Cutaway showing the second engine...

Image


Fade to Black...

Re: The Unusual type for the Unusual type

Tue Jun 19, 2012 12:25 pm

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