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Little known / experimental aircraft

Beans

*1. Loins... GIRD
pilot
"Prior Permission Required?" Really, NASA? No shit, Sherlock. :p

Why do I get the impression that this was probably like the CV-1 approach? Yeah, there's a "plate" for it, but by the time you actually have to shoot it, you basically know it by heart.
Probably PPR for the practice approaches in the gulfstream...
 

BusyBee604

St. Francis/Hugh Hefner Combo!
pilot
Super Moderator
Contributor
That's a Fairey Gannet. It went into production for the Fleet Air Arm. If you want to see some weird, find a picture of it folded up.
Yeah, back in '61 when I was in VA-55 on USS TICONDEROGA, we participated in "cross-deck" flight ops with HMS VICTORIOUS in the So. China Sea. We ran Skyhawks and Demons through their deck, and they ran Gannets and Scimitars through ours for 2 days. What a show!:eek:

Gannet & Scimitar photos below.;)
Gannett 1.jpg Gannett 2.jpg scimitarfiring.jpg
BzB
 

nittany03

Recovering NFO. Herder of Programmers.
pilot
None
Super Moderator
Contributor
Just goes to show recce 101: if it's ugly, it's British. If it's weird, it's French. If it's ugly AND weird, it's Russian. :D

Edit:
Wikipedia said:
After considering and discounting the Rolls-Royce Tweed turboprop, Fairey selected an engine based on the Armstrong Siddeley Mamba: the Double Mamba (or "Twin Mamba"), basically two Mambas mounted side-by-side and coupled through a common gearbox to coaxial contra-rotating propellers. Power was transmitted from each engine by a torsion shaft which was engaged through a series of sun, planet, epicyclic and spur gears to give a suitable reduction ratio and correct propeller-shaft rotation.
Good grief; the mechs had to have just loved that thing.
 
Last edited:

BusyBee604

St. Francis/Hugh Hefner Combo!
pilot
Super Moderator
Contributor
We ran Skyhawks and Demons through their deck, and they ran Gannets and Scimitars through ours for 2 days. What a show!:eek:
I recall vividly... the Demon & Scimitar looked remarkably alike, bulky and UGLY!:p
BzB
 

Homer J

I'm with NAVAIR. I'm here to help you.
1.jpeg

Alexander Lippisch's Aerodyne, a wingless experimental aircraft. The propulsion was generated by two co-axial shrouded propellers (1968).

2.jpeg

Blohm & Voss BV 141, a World War II German tactical reconnaissance aircraft, notable for its uncommon structural asymmetry.

3.jpeg

Hyper III, a full scale lifting body remotely piloted vehicle, built at the NASA Flight Research Center in 1969.

4.jpeg

De Lackner HZ-1 Aerocycle flying platform, designed to carry one soldier to reconnaissance missions (1954).

5.jpeg

Libellula, a tandem-winged and twin-engined British experimental plane which gives the pilot an excellent view for landing on aircraft carriers (1945).





 

RobLyman

- hawk Pilot
pilot
None
Another odd aircraft. This one I saw in storage at Ft. Rucker a few years ago.
 

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