CoastieJohn wrote:
Quote:
the Albatross in this photo (above) is a long-wing version as evidenced by the cambered tip (as is a "real" USCG model HU-16E if this is indeed one - the paint scheme alone doesn't prove that it is.) The short-wing Albatrosses such as the model UF-1 / HU-16C had slots in the outboard wing panel leading edges and an almost symmetrical airfoil at the tip.
That pic above came the CGAA site. I believe that to be the Connie Edwards one.
This real nice one below is another pic of it
(i.e the exact same aircraft) from the Flyinghigher site. It shows it as a C model on the tail.
(But it is wrong!)
They are both of the same aircraft -
N226CG - and according to the latest FAA registration record, Connie Edwards seems to have sold it recently - it is now registered as "Sale Reported."
Also, the FAA actually has it listed as a long-wing "
HU-16B" built in
1953 but they have its serial number listed as "
7226" which would be valid only as a Coast Guard serial for a
HU-16E; according to my records it was originally built in
1951 as an Air Force
SA-16A (serial no.
51-7226) and then "upgraded" to a long-wing B model in 1956 or so, but in any case the actual Grumman mfg's serial by which it is supposed to be registered now as a civilian aircraft with the FAA is
G-307.
In the larger second photo, it is obviously a long-wing version because of the cambered wingtip without any slots on the outboard wing panels. Regardless of how it is painted, it is
not a short-wing model HU-16C (but whether or not it was originally an Air Force model HU-16B, a Navy model HU-16D, or a Coast Guard model HU-16E is not so obvious.) Because the flaps are partially extended, the usually obvious inboard constant chord 70 inch wing extensions are not visible in the second photo, but other features of the later long-winged variants are still evident, including the taller vertical stab and the protruding leading edge of the horizontal stab.
...unlike the original subject of this thread,
N216HU. As far as a "correct" paint scheme for a short-wing UF-1G variant of the "Goat" in Coast Guard service, wouldn't the silver paint scheme with the black-bordered yellow band around the waist and wing tips just like an Air Force SAR scheme be a more appropriate?