Wed Jun 22, 2011 4:32 am
Wed Jun 22, 2011 7:40 am
Chappie wrote:Great shots Taigh. Its great to have pictures of your aircraft at work. Double cool ground shot- PV-2 and an LTD! Chappie
Wed Jun 22, 2011 9:07 am
Wed Jun 22, 2011 9:16 am
PJ wrote:Most of the Harppon tanker pics that I have seen show the tail wheel extended. What was the thinking behind this?
PJ
PV-2 Harpoon "Hot Stuff"
http://www.amhf.org
Wed Jun 22, 2011 11:09 am
Wed Jun 22, 2011 6:36 pm
Wed Jun 22, 2011 8:42 pm
GARY HILTON wrote:Taigh, way cool pics, thanks to Ken as well for sending them to you.
I have found only one pic of "Annie" during her spray/tanker days, and that is in Marston's Lockheed Twins book...showing John and Connie converting her to a borate tanker...sadly the job was never completed....
[...]
G.
Wed Jun 22, 2011 9:41 pm
Wed Jun 22, 2011 10:28 pm
GARY HILTON wrote:Taigh, way cool pics, thanks to Ken as well for sending them to you.In the last photo, with Tanker 101's "combat sorties record" , Do you have the identity of the couple ?
G.
Wed Jun 22, 2011 10:44 pm
Wed Jun 22, 2011 11:21 pm
Wed Jun 22, 2011 11:23 pm
Thu Jun 23, 2011 1:26 am
Taigh Ramey wrote:Hey Doug,
I'm sure Gary has better numbers that I but by my count there are 7 surviving D models which is a pretty high percentage. 35 built and 7 surviving is 20%. Your D at Lonestar and the one at Tillamook are the next ones closest to flying I suppose.
I am guessing that there are so many surviving D's because they were likely the newest and the lowest time Harpoons available when they were sold surplus. Similar to all of the surviving warbirds. If you had a choice to buy a war weary bird with cool history or a brand new one that was just flown in from the factory which one would you have picked back after WWII? Silly question as you and I would probably have picked the one with the most colorful history instead of the boring new one. If I could I would pick the historic bird and the new one for spare parts! I think this is why there are so few Warbirds with combat history that survive today.
Yes we most certainly are going to put all 8 50's back in the nose along with the ammo boxes, feed chutes, chargers etc. It ain't gonna be cheap though as replica 50's are $1000 to $1200 each these days for the aluminum ones. That's out of reach for our financially strapped museum as we are still collecting donations for the paint. I suspect we will have some cooling jackets sticking through the gun ports until we can afford the full 50's. Carl Scholl at Aerotrader has one of the cool stainless steel link and spent case ejection chutes, about a 7 inch square part, that we need for $450 so that is on the want list too. It's only money right?
I'd love to see what your Harpoon looks like on the inside. Any chance of some interior photos sometime?
This weekend was a good one for our Harpoon. A kind gentleman drove up and dropped off an air flask for the Mark 13 aircraft torpedo. The air flask is the center section of the torpedo or the middle third. It looks like it is in good shape too. Now all we need are the nose and tail. Anyone know where any torpedo parts or complete torpedos are? Here is our start:
This thing could be mistaken for a hot water heater which I suppose it kinda was...
The cool cart was picked up a number of years ago and is a WWII Navy bomb and torpedo dolly. I found it in a lady's back yard and it was being used as a planter. Looks good with a Mk 13 Mod 2A air flask on it. It will look even better with some restoration attention and a full torpedo.
Thu Jun 23, 2011 4:45 pm
Thu Jun 23, 2011 6:13 pm
Invader26 wrote:Taigh, when does get her new blue suit?
earnie wrote:any pics of that cool tracked torpedo dolly and a data plate please
AviationArtist wrote:Here's a shot of PJ's 'Hot Stuff' I did for them a while back...