http://www.allshops.org/cgi-bin/community/communityalbums.cgi?action=openalbum&albumid=9980231374607
http://www.allshops.org/cgi-bin/community/communityalbums.cgi?action=openalbum&albumid=9980231374607
aircooled wrote:triumph5 wrote: In reply to alfadriver: Was he the guy who bought pieces for one from all over the world, then assembled them? I think the majoity of it came from south America. It met the same demise as the RB51 due to a flame-out. He ejected and lived. but years of work, pancke. It is a gorgeous plane, and GREAT in the Right Stuff.It's actually a bit worse than that. After setting a 996 mph low altitude speed record (better than any military or civilian plane in the world) he was preparing for an altitude record when... Full Story: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1093756/1/index.htm
Ironically, the RB51 met a very scary similar fate- the props reversed pitch all of a sudden, and since he was in a race- there was no recovery. How the heck he survied it was shocking to all of us in Idaho Falls.
He also had a "basic" P-51D that we got to enjoy listening to. And it appears that it's no longer there anymore (can't find hotlinks to that plane). OTOH, they still do restorations there-
A few decades ago, we lived about a mile (as the crow flies) from the municipal airport where the town had built its' regional trade school right next to to the runway. Yeah, the school featured aviation-tech classes - oooh!
A friend and I were exploring the woods on a late fall afternoon when we heard "IT", an airplane nothing like the Ford Tri-Motor that was serviced at the school a couple of years earlier. Thank God the leaves had fallen and we could catch a glimpse of that profile painted in an awful (but eye-catching) blue; we knew where we heading next!
There was no trail and a few of those damn New England stone fences in the way, but we got to the airport in time to see a few touch-n-goes and the Mustang finally land and disappear into the school's hangar.
Don't know who owned the plane, who flew it, or what happened to it, but that was a day remembered - forever!
In reply to aircooled:
Dang, that's rough. Coulda been rougher for Greenmeyer, tho..didn't the early 104s actually have "downward" ejection seats?
DukeOfUndersteer wrote:
Risi rocks. Everybody remembers their GT cars, but forgets they had the most success with Ferrari's last prototype..
In reply to friedgreencorrado:
Haha, i remember it. Wasnt it Wayne Taylor, Ralf Kelleners, Eric Van de Pole.... A family friend drove their rig, would hook me up with broken 333sp bodywork.
Opus wrote:Powar wrote:more info please!!!
I don't really know anything about it except that it has a (thankfully) one of a kind front end conversion and is supposedly a V4 like mine. I'd love to have a set of those Compmotive wheels and 4-bolt hubs for mine.
Here are the other pics that were posted.
The pics were posted by a member of SaabLink.net in Finland.
914Driver wrote:
The future certainly looks a little retro
http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/radical-aerodynamic-semi-truck-with-0-29-cd-offers-dramatic-fuel-savings/
Ford took the queues from everywhere else too - handles in the body lines? BMW, Headlights wrap all the way back to the B pillar? Nissan, I bet they have 'yotas bulbous tailights too. Thats the way of the industry (which is unfortunate most new cars today look gross!)
fastEddie wrote:
Could be so much better with body-color trim, blacked-out grills and, please get rid of those fugly chrome wheels.
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