JerrySharrett
Senile Member
Yep. Then stick a minigun in the door and call her instant do-do!! (The Spooky still doing bad stuff)Jerry,
We called the DC3 or C47 "The Gooney Bird".
Butch
Yep. Then stick a minigun in the door and call her instant do-do!! (The Spooky still doing bad stuff)Jerry,
We called the DC3 or C47 "The Gooney Bird".
Butch
Do the privately owned ones get to any airshows? Sure would like to see one in the air!!The Jet is an F2 Fury. It was a Navy version of the F-86 Sabre Jet. That said, in reality, there were few common parts between the two. The Fury was a unique aircraft all unto itself. There are still one or two still flying in private hands.
Bob
The Navy called the plane Shadow and the Army called it Spooky in Vietnam, if I remember correctly.
I was in the Navy.
Thanks to everyone who appreciated my photos.
Here is a side view of the Fury and its principle adversary.
Did you take any photos of the Skyraider in the background?
gary
Brewster SB2A "Buccaneer". ID'd by the bomb bay under the fuselage. (Dauntlesses didn't have these.) Easier still to ID, because the museum has a webpage on this plane at http://collections.naval.aviation.m...oms/Display.php?irn=9061&QueryPage=/Query.php .Another guess what below that.
Yeah, I shot it but was never able to get it to my satisfaction because of the dense crowd of aircraft in that part of the museum. Here's what I have but the shot is a cluttered mess.
Another guess what below that.
Gary,
Did you see Asa's answer. The attachment he posted is the same plane V-S-5
Butch
Gary,To be serious I was leaning towards somekind of a carrier based aircraft with flaps of the type used on dive bombers.
Gary,
You were not wrong re: carrier based dive bomber - Buccaneer was designed for this role. Unfortunately, the plane didn't meet expectations (less than desired performance, and poor handling characteristics), and never saw combat use in WW2. From the webpage linked to earlier, less than 800 were built.