MAU MAU wrote:Bring back the Saturn V!
I saw one yesterday!
MAU MAU wrote:Bring back the Saturn V!
Yellowbelly wrote:Looking at the photo, I should point out that Rutan and the boys had to go above 100,000 meters to win the prize. That's 328,000 ft (and some change). Notice the registration number on the spaceship?
YB
Few outside NH's North Country know about Carmen Onofrio (from Milan, NH) and his 43 successful landings and take-offs from the summit of Mt Washington. All flights were during the 1940's, in his Piper Cub, carrying people, equipment, and supplies. Most landings were on a 40' by 125' strip in a parking lot on Home Stretch, near the tank farm and the turn on the Cog RR track.
Actually he made a 44th flight, crash landed and walked away from it. After his plane was repaired, Onofrio took off from the summit and almost crashed in the Great Gulf. The cause being snow blew into the entire tail section during repairs and no one realized this. He wisely retired from these summit landings.
A memorial at the Berlin Airport (in Milan) reads, "I can say with a good deal of joy that I have seen the great and wonderful work of our creator from the vantage point of a high flying eagle."
It was difficult for me to believe when the locals told me until I read articles sent to me by a generous and knowledgeable staff member from Mt Washington's Observatory. Articles were published in Yankee Magazine (March 197, Jean Batchelder's History and Heros of NH Aviation, Northern NH Magazine, The Berlin Daily Sun and in the Mt Washington Observatory magazine Windswept (Summer 1997 & Spring 2002). It is still difficult for me to believe, but it is absolutely true.














courierguy wrote:Not a vintage pic, I just took this a few days ago. But, it's the front office of a WW2 troop transport gliderThose guys had a pretty rough job and suffered some high casualty rates I believe. The construction looked extremely robust, overbuilt almost, but probably not when taking in account the way they used them

courierguy wrote:Not a vintage pic, I just took this a few days ago. But, it's the front office of a WW2 troop transport gliderThose guys had a pretty rough job and suffered some high casualty rates I believe. The construction looked extremely robust, overbuilt almost, but probably not when taking in account the way they used them
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denalipilot wrote:courierguy wrote:Not a vintage pic, I just took this a few days ago. But, it's the front office of a WW2 troop transport gliderThose guys had a pretty rough job and suffered some high casualty rates I believe. The construction looked extremely robust, overbuilt almost, but probably not when taking in account the way they used them
Wow, that has some meaning to me. My neighbor who passed away in his '90s last year was involved with those in WWII. I think he was in command of a glider unit, or flew them in any case. His stories certainly corroborated your remark about heavy casualties. I believe he said they were skinned with plywood. His unit was tasked with developing landing sites. They would glide down with grub hoes and other hand tools, and create an airstrip for the powered aircraft to use. I was fascinated by it, but he didn't talk about it too often. Maybe something to do with those heavy casualties. Where is that one you photographed?
Thanks,
-DP
Yellowbelly wrote:...and the most improbable rescue of WW-II when a C-47 crashed in the jungle of New Guinea, killing most of the 24 people on board. To rescue the three survivors, they eventually landed one of these gliders in a gully, then snatched it back into the air with a C-47 flying overhead.
Nothing was impossible to those folks. I read the book a while ago: "Lost in Shangri-La". Some neat pictures of the whole affair too.
YB

Yellowbelly wrote:...and the most improbable rescue of WW-II when a C-47 crashed in the jungle of New Guinea, killing most of the 24 people on board. To rescue the three survivors, they eventually landed one of these gliders in a gully, then snatched it back into the air with a C-47 flying overhead.
Nothing was impossible to those folks. I read the book a while ago: "Lost in Shangri-La". Some neat pictures of the whole affair too.
My hat is permanently off to those guys (and gals).
YB
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