Sun Feb 12, 2017 2:21 pm
JohnTerrell wrote:...Collings also now have the Spitfire Mk.XVI TE356 (ex-Evergreen Museum) which of course will need a good deal of work to fly again.
Sun Feb 12, 2017 4:11 pm
BenG wrote:John, the Collings Foundation one is a Mk.IX and not a Mk.V.
Ben
Sun Feb 12, 2017 7:16 pm
Fleet16b wrote:PeterA wrote:Dave Hadfield wrote:We have 2 of course: a flying Mk XVI and a Mk IX that will fly this summer.
http://www.vintagewings.ca/en-ca/home.aspx
Dave,
My understanding is that SL721, your 'flying Mk XVI', requires quite a lot of TLC to get it back in the air.
PeterA
That was my understanding as well and that the aircraft is currently for sale
Thu Feb 16, 2017 7:59 pm
Thu Feb 16, 2017 8:24 pm
Thu Feb 16, 2017 9:18 pm
Fri Feb 17, 2017 2:56 am
TBM Tony wrote:geek Sorry, But did I missed the Lone Star Flight Museum's Mk. XVI ( Converted to High Back,) that was caught in the Hurricane's High water ? again, so sorry if I missed that here!
Fri Feb 17, 2017 8:05 am
Fri Feb 17, 2017 3:02 pm
Jason wrote:TBM Tony wrote:geek Sorry, But did I missed the Lone Star Flight Museum's Mk. XVI ( Converted to High Back,) that was caught in the Hurricane's High water ? again, so sorry if I missed that here!
This is interesting. From the basic search I have just done, TE392 was a gate guardian basically it's whole life until 1984 when it was recovered. It would seem the conversion to high-back was carried out in United States in the late nineties? I would have thought that the airframe would have been largely intact & original until it's restoration to flight, so why would it have been converted to high-back?
Was it just because high-back Spitfires look more like Spitfires..... so to speak?
And when that "restoration" was carried out on what I am presuming was an original British airframe.... how much American sheetmetal, hardware, rivets & fittings were incorporated?
Was this the done thing back in the day & if so, were any other Spitfires "converted"?
Just interested to know if anyone can shed any light on it?
Jason
Fri Feb 17, 2017 5:32 pm
Jason wrote:This is interesting. From the basic search I have just done, TE392 was a gate guardian basically it's whole life until 1984 when it was recovered. It would seem the conversion to high-back was carried out in United States in the late nineties? I would have thought that the airframe would have been largely intact & original until it's restoration to flight, so why would it have been converted to high-back?
Jason