You might see if Lou Drendel a photo book, T-34 In Action, no.107and maybe there is a photo in there. Lou has done a lot of paperback books on different planes, He is or was active in the T-34 group.
A Mentor is a fun little sport plane, able to do some of everything. It's fun and good at normal aerobatics, and most of all it is the easiest airplane to fly that I can think of. You sit on the center-line, in the front cockpit, under a bubble canopy and have a central stick for control. The VSO stall speed is about 48 knots or so, with gear and flaps down. You can do normal approach at about 65k,no need to be above 70, and you have a nosewheel for steering after landing. The controls, especially elevator are effective all the way down to the "minimum run landing" speed of 50 knots, which requires some power to maintain, and after touchdown you can brake and they are pretty effective, You can easily land and stop in 1500 feet maybe more like 1000 feet. If I had to make an engine out forced landing, and could chose my plane, it would be a 34. I have actually done one sort of forced landing when I ran a tank dry, and it was not problem as I was near an airport,and made it. It will handle up to about a 20mph crosswind before you run out of control. They are a bit heavy and not too streamlined so they are not real fast, they are not going to cruise anywhere near a fighter speed. Perhaps about 140 knots with the original engine, and perhaps up to about 170 knots with the 285 or 300 hp Continental engine that many owners have installed. This conversion is really expensive, just a guess would be $75,000 and depends on how much the engine costs, whether it is new or used. You have to have new prop and lot's of work,and you probably lose the inverted oil system that the original one has. The original 225hp engine in very reliable, and it performs ok down low. At sea level it will climb about 1000 fpm, about like a T-6. The problem with the Mentor is that when you get to 8,000 feet it might climb 300 fpm while the T-6 with itls supercharger is still climbing 1000, and it will well up above 10,000. T-6s have been flown above 20,000 feet on mapping photo flights, while it is hard to get a T-34 to 14,000. The 34 has a nice baggage compartment, and the 2nd cockpit is fully fitted with controls for the passenger or student. It was a well made airplane and very advanced for its time. It came with a lot of neat military looking instruments in both cockpits, and I really like that look. There are quite a few switches and gadgets to play with, there is even an emergency gear Up, not just down, system that few other planes have. Some guys can't stand not to have all the latest gadgets, and when the put the larger engine in, they also put new instruments in the panels. I am all for good radios, but I think part of the charm of a warbird is the military interior, and I don't see the alure of having one look just like half the new Cessnas on the ramp, but there are perhaps more guys that are techo nerds than there are preservers like me. Some might allege that I am a bit old fashioned and out of date, but that can't be true, can it? The new vacuum driven instruments are lighter than the original electrically driven military ones, and of course converting them is a really big expense also. You can easily spend $50k or even $100k if you try to outdo some King Air with your Mentor panel. I've seen one that had not only full new instruments in the back cockpit but a full 2nd set of radios also. If anyone wants any help learning to fly a T-34 or advice on a purchase please call me. If I had to teach a basic student, I'd love to use a T-34 if I didn't have a tailwheel plane to use. I would be confident in having most any student or pilot fly from the front while I was in the back,and I have even done that.
_________________ Bill Greenwood
Spitfire N308WK
|