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Barry Churcher 22-02-14 16:24

Our Illustrious Leader
 
1 Attachment(s)
Here is an interesting name for an aircraft. Cairo 1932.

lynx42 22-02-14 22:29

Well found, Barry.

Bill Murray 22-02-14 22:56

Priceless :thup2: :thup2:

Bill

Tony Wheeler 23-02-14 03:40

Hilarious!

Lynn Eades 23-02-14 07:11

Is this the pre cursor to British Airways? Does the flag stay there in flight?
What is the make and model?..... A big biplane, much too big for a Sopworth Camel, but in the right company :D

Keith Webb 23-02-14 08:21

Aircraft
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Lynn Eades (Post 192107)
Is this the pre cursor to British Airways? Does the flag stay there in flight?
What is the make and model?..... A big biplane, much too big for a Sopworth Camel, but in the right company :D

It's a Handley Page HP42 airliner, in service throughout the 1930s and very safe with no passenger injuries in that time.

Richard Farrant 23-02-14 11:08

Quote:

Originally Posted by Keith Webb (Post 192108)
It's a Handley Page HP42 airliner, in service throughout the 1930s and very safe with no passenger injuries in that time.

Keith,
One of them, Hannibal, was lost without trace during WW2 in the Middle East with crew and four passengers missing.
http://www.rrhobby.ca/Hannibal/flight_cw197.htm

Hanno Spoelstra 23-02-14 11:48

3 Attachment(s)
Ah yes, Handley Page H.P.42 G-AAUD Hanno. Big, strong, reliable - that I bear the same name is a coincidence :rolleyes

See the Wikipedia entry for a short history and the origin of it's name:
Quote:

G-AAUD, production number 42/3, was named after the Carthaginian explorer Hanno the Navigator, who explored the Atlantic coast of Africa in approx. 570 BC. Hanno first flew on 19 July 1931 and was later converted to a H.P.42(W) (Hannibal class). The aircraft was impressed into No. 271 Squadron RAF and was destroyed in a gale at Whitchurch Airport, Bristol when it was blown together with Heracles and damaged beyond repair on 19 March 1940.

G-AAUD Hanno starred in the 1937 short film, Air Outpost - 24 Hours at the City and Airport of Sharjah in the Persian Gulf.

Gunner 23-02-14 19:45

and Struts
 
Lots of STRUTS!!! :thup2: :D

Cheers! Mike:remember

Lynn Eades 24-02-14 00:16

Hanno, you don't have the struts, but along with the fine name, you'd share the big wingspan :D
I suppose back then that shaped nose section would have been all hand formed?
Thanks Keith for the I.D.
H.P. built bombers during WWII didn't they?
I can't say that I recall ever seeing one before. Some aspects of her are pretty, and some are a bit ugly, but she is certainly of "an era". She (sorry Hanno)reminds me of those monsters built by the Russians, some laden with naval type artillery.
Thanks Barry for posting.

Keith Webb 24-02-14 00:30

Handley Page bombers
 
Yes they certainly did, Lynn.

Pre-war there were types such as the Harrow, then the Hampden/Hereford (my uncle was killed on an anti-shipping strike flying a Hampden), and the Halifax, one of the mainstays of Bomber Command.

Post-war was the Victor, one of the famous V Force bombers.

Hanno Spoelstra 24-02-14 18:29

Quote:

G-AAUD Hanno starred in the 1937 short film, Air Outpost - 24 Hours at the City and Airport of Sharjah in the Persian Gulf
Great to see it in action - see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=253vJ6uYpq4

"The Hanno has arrived..." :D

H.

Tony Wheeler 25-02-14 06:19

3 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Keith Webb (Post 192142)
Pre-war there were types such as the Harrow, then the Hampden/Hereford (my uncle was killed on an anti-shipping strike flying a Hampden), and the Halifax, one of the mainstays of Bomber Command.
Post-war was the Victor, one of the famous V Force bombers.

And of course their biplane bombers were the mainstay in WW1, from which the HP42 airliner draws lineage. I think you had an Airfix O/400 when we were kids Keith, or was it a Vickers Vimy? I'm pretty sure you had a Halifax too, and I know I had a Hampden, which I always thought was a very attractive streamlined aircraft, although I believe it was disliked for it's flimsy rear fuselage which could not sustain damage. Certainly the Wimpy was much loved for this ability and became the mainstay RAF bomber, until the heavies were introduced.

Attachment 63685 Attachment 63686 Attachment 63687

Tony Wheeler 25-02-14 07:03

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hanno Spoelstra (Post 192112)
Big, strong, reliable - that I bear the same name is a coincidence

Perhaps so Hanno, but nevertheless not inappropriate for a Dutchman, given your mob's fame in the realm of early maritime exploration. With which we're well acquainted here, living as we do in New Holland, with Van Diemen's Land lying just south of us, and New Zeeland to the south east!

I've sometimes wondered how we finished up speaking English instead of Dutch, perhaps it had something to do with Jan Carstensz, who in 1623 reported to the Dutch East India company of seeing "a dry land, no use to mankind, whose inhabitants were the poorest and most wretched creatures ever seen''!

Hardly a glowing report, and it would be another 150 years before the Poms arrived, and only for the purpose of sending convicts here, because the Yanks had recently stopped them sending convicts there!

Funny how world history can turn on such tiny events as Jan Carstensz's report. Of course, some may be inclined to agree with his assessment of the place even today!

motto 25-02-14 22:42

Flimsies
 
A quite enjoyable 'period piece' Hanno, from a time when the sun never set on the British Empire.
Couldn't help noticing the flimsy tins being used to transport water after their original purpose had been fulfilled.
The fuselage skins around the nose/cockpit area would certainly have been hand formed Lynn. Some of them seem to have been beaten into shape over a stump.

David


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