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Photo ID: 0649294
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Views: 4206
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N60094 (cn 56) This aircraft was crashed in Massachusetts. Found in a junkyard, the wreck passed through two owners then was donated to Cole Palen in1952. Mr. Palen rebuilt it and it now flies at Old Rhinebeck. It is the oldest flying aircraft in the United States and second oldest in the world. Powered by an actual 1909 “Y” 35 HP Anzani 3 cylinder radial. |
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Photo ID: 0635530
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Views: 6582
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N8096L (cn 1999) Replica built by Carl Swanson. Powered by 150 HP Hispano-Suiza. Finished in the colors of the SPADs flown by Capt. Georges Guynemer. |
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Photo ID: 0614497
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Views: 2112
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N3529 / G-ACDB (cn 86556) Ex RAF S/N PG647. Disregard the U.K. registration. The actual "N" number is just under the horizontal stabilizer. |
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Photo ID: 0333869
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Views: 9722
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Long Island's Cradle of Aviation Museum. Grumman clean room display showing a LEM under construction. The Lunar Landers were built by Grumman at Bethpage on Long Island. Olympus C-730UZ |
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Photo ID: 0333868
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Views: 4172
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Long Island's Cradle of Aviation Museum. USMC simple, portable, Porsche powered one-man helicopter (1955) for liaison, observation, and small-unit tactical maneuvers. Never made it beyond prototype stage. Olympus C-730UZ |
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Photo ID: 0332284
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Views: 4139
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N69Q (cn NAV-4-2097D) Shakedown trials on the new Olympus C-730UZ. Don't know what modification causes it but this very original looking 1950 Navion is certified Experimental. |
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Photo ID: 0332283
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Views: 1481
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N50947 (cn 17264218) Mfd 1974. Through the fence shot with Olympus C-730UZ. |
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Photo ID: 0332282
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Views: 3472
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0968 / 6-F-1 (cn 366) Long Island's Cradle of Aviation Museum. Olympus C-730UZ |
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Photo ID: 0326045
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Views: 1608
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N2805U (cn 17250405) Mfg. 1963. Through the fence shot with new Olympus C-730UZ on trial run. |
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Photo ID: 0326044
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Views: 1364
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N5224Y (cn 27-2272) Mfd 1963. Through-the-fence shot. [Olympus C-730UZ] |
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Photo ID: 0290633
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Views: 12459
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147522 / 2K-164 (cn 253-113) They were funny looking, old, slow and often dirty but back in the Viet Nam era, we trained all the Naval (jet) Aviators with them. |
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Photo ID: 0287411
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Views: 8955
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N7549A (cn 18035/214) For those who like to track the life cycle of aircraft, this airplane has appeared twice on airliners.net as Middle East Airlines OD-AFO. Del 06/61 as N7549A. Destroyed by shelling in Beirut 6-1-82. Here it is in its original AA colors. Photo quality not great – lighting atrocious, old low-end Yashika and 37 years of mistreatment makes any image from this slide difficult to render. |
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Photo ID: 0282794
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Views: 7828
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147441 / 2K-06 (cn 253-32) You can watch all the NFL Football you want - you will never see a touchdown like this. A Naval Aviation student completes a formation hop. |
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Photo ID: 0282793
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Views: 4397
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147522 / 2K-164 (cn 253-113) VT-7 afternoon operations. Plane captain moving into position to guide pilot. VT-9 line in the distance. Row ahead already gone in afternoon launch. Yellow vehicle is a start-cart. T-2A had no starter - used air-impingement start system (jet version of hand-propping). Top ten percent of primary class graduates were sent to Meridian for jet transition. Maybe a future Top Gun taxiing there. |
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Photo ID: 0277772
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Views: 10094
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147441 / 2K-106 (cn 253-32) First T-2A in airliners.net database. Showing feature that defines a T-2A - a single tailpipe. Powered by single Westinghouse J34-WE-48. John McCain (now Senator McCain) was in VT-7 - likely flew this bird. NAAS Meridian is McCain field - named after John McCain's grandfather. Quality of photo not great - 35 year old badly damaged slide after extensive restoration. |
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