This is the place where the majority of the warbird (aircraft that have survived military service) discussions will take place. Specialized forums may be added in the new future
Fri Jan 11, 2013 2:49 pm
TXCOMT wrote:And meaning no disrespect to those who served on those incredible flights, that was then and this is now...427CV's crossing is still astounding when you consider the age of the plane. Plus, who else has flown a warbird for that length of time and over open water lately? I certainly wouldn't have the guts, mainly 'cause I don't like to swim!
I reluctantly question the 30-hour-plus flights, though, mainly based on this excerpt from this story
http://www.pilotspost.co.za/arn0000205:
"With a fuel capacity of over 6,000 liters the endurance of the PBY is nearly 20 hours at lower power settings."
Did the Double Sunrise birds get extra tanks somewhere or just really pilotage and tailwinds? TXCOMT
TXCOMT - various Catalinas have flown long distances on ferry flights in recent years. For example, G-PBYA (then C-FNJF) was flown St Johns, Newfoundland - Shannon as part of its delivery from Nanaimo, BC to Duxford a few years back and that was around 14 hours over water. It is still routinely flown long distances and I was on board for Reykjavik - Oslo a few months ago of which nearly seven hours was over the North Atlantic. Of course, wartime crews would have considered that a picnic as they would often fly operational missions that were the equivalent distance/duration of Reyjavik - Oslo - Reykjavik - Oslo without landing/refuelling. An amazing aircraft.
Despite your quote, the
Double Sunrise Catalina flights were in excess of 30 hours unrefulled on a number of occasions but the airframes were non-standard, having been lightened by the deletion of non-essential equipment and then equipped with eight auxilliary tanks in the hull that supplemented the standard wing tanks. The longest crossing was 32 hours 9 minutes on August 30th 1943.
Fri Jan 11, 2013 4:06 pm
Thanks for the info! I knew there had to be some mods for a Cat to go 32 hours...and I have no doubt some "good" (the word I left out in my original reply) pilotage was involved. Eight tanks in the hull? Wow!
So nobody knows the status? Man, of all planes I wish was trackable on FlightAware.com!
TXCOMT
Fri Jan 11, 2013 5:08 pm
Apparently, for reasons I dont know, the owner of the Cat has asked that the crew do not post on Facebook /the net etc as to where they are. I would image though, that when they enter US airspace you will be able to pick them up on FlightAware
Wed Jan 16, 2013 10:37 am
Wed Jan 16, 2013 10:48 pm
Fri Jan 18, 2013 11:42 am
David Legg wrote:TXCOMT wrote:
The Double Sunrise Catalina flights were in excess of 30 hours unrefulled on a number of occasions but the airframes were non-standard, having been lightened by the deletion of non-essential equipment and then equipped with eight auxilliary tanks in the hull that supplemented the standard wing tanks. The longest crossing was 32 hours 9 minutes on August 30th 1943.
Just to add that whenever a Catalina can fly on one engine to save fuel, the Qantas flights were so heavy loaded that they had to wait for 15 to 20 hours before they could feather.

"Complete radio silence without any radio navigation aids" Buuhh!!
J-Christophe
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