Jump to content

Warbird fever


Guest Dwight Schrute

hottie vs. solo flight  

116 members have voted

  1. 1. Rather get the girl or go airborne in your favorite airplan?e

    • hottie
      46
    • airplane
      70


Recommended Posts

Hacker,

That looks, enjoyment-wise, exacting like banging Sophie Bush in the cake hole.

Look, I voted hottie, but...as mentioned, that ASSUMES a 1.5 sortie both ways.

Regardless of Mx, the times must be cumulative. My Vote Stands.

BENDY

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 11 months later...

warbird for sure.

as the saying goes.."even with the hottest girl alive, there is someone tired of fvucking her..."

I dont think a stang, spitfire, or any of the above will ever get old.

-summers

P.S. Im jealous of you select few asswipes who have flown em... :thumbsup:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

Another ones in the air and kickin ass, and it's a P-40 to boot!

A rare World War II fighter, painted in a purposeful flat olive drab, flew over the Sonoma Valley this week, the engine a dull roar as the plane banked and dove.

Related Links:

* Restored warbird flies again | Video

“It sounds great ... It’s a beautiful thing to see,” said Jack Wallace, 86, of Petaluma. “Just to hear it is great.”

Wallace was one of a handful of World War II fighter pilots among the crowd of 75 at the airport Wednesday to see the fighter, a Curtiss P-40.

“It’s an absolute pleasure to fly, I’m pleased,” said Chris Prevost, 46, owner of Sonoma Valley Airport and Vintage Aircraft Co. He estimates he’s spent 10,000 hours over several years restoring the craft.

Prevost’s fighter is one of only two dozen P-40s still flying, out of 13,700 built. It is valued at about $2.5 million.

The Curtiss P-40 is a single-seat, propeller-driven plane first built in 1938 and was hopelessly outperformed by the German and Japanese fighters of the day.

“We found out the only way you could fight a Zero and live is you make one pass at it and then get the hell out of there,” said Ray Melikian, 90, of Visalia, an Army Air Corps pilot with a special relationship with the plane.

When the plane, which was deteriorating in Australia, was sold to Prevost, a historian used the serial number on the plane to trace its history back to Melikian, reuniting the pilot and plane.

“I would take it up as high as I could. That was the way we fought. I dove it from 20,000 feet and tried to pull it out at 5,000 feet.”

The fighter was not fitted with a turbocharger, which hindered the power the engine would produce at high altitudes, so it became a low-level fighter.

“Barges, airports, cover for troops, escorting low-level bombers, things like that ... we went up damn near every day,” Melikian said.

Melikian was on a convoy that stopped overnight in Pearl Harbor three days before the Dec. 7, 1941 attack, so he began flying combat missions almost immediately from Darwin, an Australian city that was heavily bombed by the Japanese.

In two years in the South Pacific, he logged 238 combat missions. He is credited with downing two Zeroes and one Japanese bomber.

The P-40 was a difficult plane to fly, with stiff controls, strong torque from the engine and a narrow track for the landing gear, making takeoffs and landings harrowing, Melikian said.

Still, it was heavy and rugged and became the workhorse for the American, British and Russian air forces, gaining fame as the planes used by the Flying Tigers in China against the Japanese.

“It’s lumpy,” Prevost said of the plane’s skin. “It is lumpy because it has a lot of structure, it was designed to take a bullet.”

Prevost first saw one as a kid hanging around the Sonoma Valley Airport, in the 1960s, when they were not considered valuable, and fell in love.

This P-40 was damaged in a landing collision in Australia, robbed of parts and left to deteriorate.

When Prevost got it, it was only a shell from the firewall to just behind the fuselage, with little left of the wings, necessitating years of finding parts and making those that he couldn’t find.

“Lots of machining, lots of drilling, lots of rivets,” Prevost said.

Prevost flew the plane for the first time a week ago, a 22-minute shake-down flight to make sure the hydraulics all worked.

Wednesday, he took the plane up for 40 minutes, at times sweeping low over the airport.

Prevost added a second seat in the fighter and plans to sell rides in the plane beginning in March, beginning at $1,595 for a 30-minute flight.

It is also the same plane that Melikian had flown in combat missions, and he is hoping for his own reunion with it.

“I’m 90 years old, I don’t think that he will let me go up there and fly myself,” Melikian said. “As soon as he gets it certified, he will call me.”

To bad I'm at college, it happened in my area, and would have been a great sight with a chance to probably hear a lot of great stories.

http://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/20090...NEWS/901309992#

Edited by donkey
Link to comment
Share on other sites

As we are getting ready to crank engines this morning we here an unfamliar callsign on ground. I look over to my left and see a beautiful P-51D rolling into parking right in front of base ops. Jack Roush, owner of Roush Racing, and 'Gentleman Jim' paid a visit to the ole' Selfridge Air patch today. I didn't have my camera with me, but that beauty is burned into my memory. That piece of art looks like it rolled of the line yesterday...

It got me thinking, anybody else have any cool warbird stories? Mine was not that cool, but it was such a great site to see something like that before an eval. I would have given my left nut-probably my right one too-if Jack would have asked for them in exchange for a ride. One more question: Would you forgo sleeping with your fantasy hottie for a 1.5 solo in the airplane of your dreams? Truly a tough choice...maybe.

I actually got my private out of Concord Regional Airport, right by the race track, so I used to see him pulling out of there in P-51 on occasion... and yeah it was freakin gorgeous... the sound was probably the most manly thing I've ever heard. I think I started growing chest hair that day.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


×
×
  • Create New...