I was confused about the Navy aircraft with a USAF tail number. Checked the AF "Buno" list, found that ol' T-29B 51-7906, spent it's formative years in the USAF, and is spending it's 'golden years' on display in the Pima Air & Space Museum, Tucson, AZ.Looks suspiciously like a re-engined variant of the first airplane I trained in at VT-10:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7d/Convair_T-29B_(240-27),_USA_-_Navy_AN1506368.jpg![]()
Of historical note, my logbook shows that I logged 11 hours in this exact tail number on the 6th and 10th of December, 1971…NPA to NPA…long-range dead-reckoning nav hops. Drift meters…CDMVTAE…CAS/IAS/TAS airspeed conversions…Jeppesen CR-5 flight computers, plotters and pencils on big charts...you get the idea...![]()
Whenever I see (or hear about) KFIR's, I think about "Neptunus Lex." A very tragic loss . . . . .One of those Kfirs is on static at the Oceana airshow every once in a while . . . .
Yeah, well,, I think there were at least 4 of those. I always seem to recall flying on the aft starboard side. Don't know about the scratches, but there MAY be a now-petrified puke bag somewhere on the cabin floor. I do remember that!Rumor has it that there is a R1 WAS HERE scratched into the SNFO station bulkhead!
BzB
Yup, ATAC doesn't have those anymore so I wonder who was flying it.
Convair 580? I once flew the Navy's non-turboprop 440 version on a boondoggle from the East Coast to the Boundary Lakes on the Minnesota/Canadian border for a week or two of canoe portages and fishing. In the right seat I was mostly clueless. We had massive icing over Lake Michigan and almost went down. The fishing wasn't as expected either. So we had to send the outfitter far back in his canoe to civilization to resupply us the following day with more beer. No per diem for pilots and a number of enlisted crew, but no leave charged either. It was good training.This old dude started doing regular weekday runs out of Aguadilla, PR:
![]()