That’s a fascinating photo taken before photoshop.
Be certain to stand directly above bulkheads and aft wing-spar carry-thru, wear soft-sole shoes, and be lifted into position rather than climb up there directly. (And remember that back then the average male weight was about 145 lbs.)
'53 B-model N146YS SN:25713
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention. An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons.
Flew by your island today Charlie, air was solid.
Thanks for the pic Gary
Sorry possible destination memory failure here.
My day one aircraft school, lined up in front of a Harvard’s wing; An English instructor, short and needing an advantage proceeded to climb up onto wing from the trailing edge root. Interesting guy, he really envisioned himself as a Marine drill Sargent. He proceeded to walk back and forth along the front spar all the while ranting at us. “ You’ll be working midnights, you’ll see your mailman smiling when you head home, you’ll need to work overtime to get by, your dog will bite you when you get hone, you’ll work with toxic materials, blah, blah blah”.
I remember turning to a guy next to me and whispering “ what’s this guys problem”
Almost 40 years later, I’ll just say that’s one of the signs on the road of life I drove right by.
(Still struggling to figure out how to post a pic, but the above link is a Cessna C-34 with 17 guys standing on it.
'53 B-model N146YS SN:25713
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention. An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons.
gahorn wrote:... the above link is a Cessna C-34 with 17 guys standing on it.
Fascinating photo. I count 28 people standing on the wing. Clyde happens to be the 17th from the left. Looks like the “white collar” guys are in the middle with the “blue collar” guys/gals flanking them. I see they’ve placed a board down for them to stand on. By the look of the ties it’s a typical breezy Kansas day. The plane appears to be a 1929 DC-6B rather than a C-34. Note the vertical struts. Compare this to the C-34 below.
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Gosh Gary we could use you in our boroscope group. The expanded photo (note blown up is not an aviation term) resolution is too poor for me to make out the faces. What’s your secret
Jim,
I was just looking at the link George provided. A little ways down there it has an arrow pointing to Clyde. George may have linked a different picture than he intended. It seems employees standing on the wings was pretty standard for Cessna's advertising. Here's one with 17 guys on the wing of a Model A:
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Yes, Gary has it right... my recent computer issues prevented me from accessing the photo I intended and did not “proof” the link before posting it...(so didn’t see that the caption didn’t fit the pic)
'53 B-model N146YS SN:25713
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention. An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons.
Marketing was not Cessna's strong suite. Compare Cessna to Luscombe. Although if you look close, wedged between all the men in greasy overalls, you'll find two ladies in overalls. It's a start. (Click to enlarge each photo).
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