aviation feats
Moderators: GAHorn, Karl Towle, Bruce Fenstermacher
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aviation feats
what were the greatest aviation feats?
what do you think?
#1 lindbergh's transatlantic flight
#2 wright brother's 1st flight
#3 ?
iowa
what do you think?
#1 lindbergh's transatlantic flight
#2 wright brother's 1st flight
#3 ?
iowa

1951 170A 1468D SN 20051
1942 L-4B 2764C USAAC 43-572 (9433)
AME #17747
- Indopilot
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Unbelievable
#3 George's 170 building enough speed to lead the flight of 170's to
Oshkosh?
Oshkosh?

52 170B s/n 20446
56 172 s/n 28162
Echo Weed eater, Jezebeel
56 172 s/n 28162
Echo Weed eater, Jezebeel
- Bruce Fenstermacher
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I think the flights leading up to and including Yeager's flight breaking the speed of sound and helping to usher in the space program.
Of course George leading a pack of 170's to Oshkosh might be pretty high as well.
Of course George leading a pack of 170's to Oshkosh might be pretty high as well.

CAUTION - My forum posts may be worth what you paid for them!
Bruce Fenstermacher, Past President, TIC170A
Email: brucefenster at gmail.com
Bruce Fenstermacher, Past President, TIC170A
Email: brucefenster at gmail.com
- johneeb
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This link makes very interesting reading regarding the first person to break the sound barrier.
http://home.att.net/~historyzone/Welch1.html
http://home.att.net/~historyzone/Welch1.html
John E. Barrett
aka. Johneb
Sent from my "Cray Super Computer"
aka. Johneb
Sent from my "Cray Super Computer"
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Re: aviation feats
Agreed. How about Beryl Markhams flight as described in 'West With The Night'?iowa wrote:what were the greatest aviation feats?
what do you think?
#1 lindbergh's transatlantic flight
#2 wright brother's 1st flight
#3 ?
iowa

Bruce
1950 170A N5559C
1950 170A N5559C
- blueldr
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With all due consideration, when I look back to the fact that I managed to solo in the PT-22 at Morton Air Academy in Blythe, California, in 1942, without killing myself or giving my instructor, John J. Raptis, a heart attack, I have to consider that an accomplishment worthy of selection as the third most significant milestone in american aviation annals.
Modesty precludes further details. I was an Aviation Cadet and Uncle Sam was paying the bills. I guess he thinks he got his moneys worth. He's been paying me faithfully every first of the month ever since.
Modesty precludes further details. I was an Aviation Cadet and Uncle Sam was paying the bills. I guess he thinks he got his moneys worth. He's been paying me faithfully every first of the month ever since.
BL
- cessna170bdriver
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I think flying around the world non-stop, non-refueled was a pretty remarkable feat.
Although I'm unable to verify it, I have heard that before the Voyager flew, Chuck Yeager proclaimed that flight would be impossible. Then after Voyager's success he likened it to driving across the country un-refuled, saying all you needed was a large enough gas tank.
Miles

Although I'm unable to verify it, I have heard that before the Voyager flew, Chuck Yeager proclaimed that flight would be impossible. Then after Voyager's success he likened it to driving across the country un-refuled, saying all you needed was a large enough gas tank.

Miles
- GAHorn
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N9149A wrote:I think the flights leading up to and including Yeager's flight breaking the speed of sound and helping to usher in the space program.
Of course George leading a pack of 170's to Oshkosh might be pretty high as well.
Contrary to popular opinion...my airplane has never actually broken the sound barrier. Sound-judgement barrier a few times...but never the sound barrier.johneeb wrote:This link makes very interesting reading regarding the first person to break the sound barrier....

Last edited by GAHorn on Tue Jun 05, 2007 1:27 am, edited 1 time in total.
'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.
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention.
An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons.

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- johneeb
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Who among us has been through the Sound Barrier. I have by taking advantage of a discounted ticket on British Airways Concorde. My thought was that the life of the Concorde was coming to an end and it was unlikely that I would ever have another chance to go that fast or that high. On my flight the pilots did a constant Mach 2 cruise and the max Altitude was 58,600'. Waygahorn wrote:N9149A wrote:I think the flights leading up to and including Yeager's flight breaking the speed of sound and helping to usher in the space program.
Of course George leading a pack of 170's to Oshkosh might be pretty high as well.Contrary to popular opinion...my airplane has never actually broken the sound barrier. Sound-judgement barrier a few times...but never the sound barrier.johneeb wrote:This link makes very interesting reading regarding the first person to break the sound barrier....



John E. Barrett
aka. Johneb
Sent from my "Cray Super Computer"
aka. Johneb
Sent from my "Cray Super Computer"
- GAHorn
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When I flew for British Aerospace, it was not uncommon for the company to send employees travelling on business on the Concorde if flights were not full. Usually cockpit visitation privileges would be extended to company employees and my fellow workers would get a ride on the second jumpseat.
I never got a chance to do it, but the guys I worked with loved to re-tell the story about the favorite practical joke to play on a new Concorde Flight Engineer:
The airplane grows between 7-9" in cruise due to heat. The favorite joke was, for one of the pilots to find an excuse to go to the lavatory and while exiting the cabin to find a reason to take the engineer's flight bag and reposition it to a place between the engineer's table and the aft cockpit bulkhead, usually with a remark to the engineer "You don't mind if I move this do you?" (as if it were in the way sitting on the cockpit floor.)
Any courteous engineer would defer to the captain or first officer agreeably, of course.
It would only be evident after touchdown (after the airplane had cooled down an shrunk back to normal length) while trying to vacate the cockpit at the end of the duty period that the engineer would discover that his 8"-wide flight bag (now squeezed between the desk and bulkhead) could not be removed from the cockpit until the airplane was airborne again.
I never got a chance to do it, but the guys I worked with loved to re-tell the story about the favorite practical joke to play on a new Concorde Flight Engineer:
The airplane grows between 7-9" in cruise due to heat. The favorite joke was, for one of the pilots to find an excuse to go to the lavatory and while exiting the cabin to find a reason to take the engineer's flight bag and reposition it to a place between the engineer's table and the aft cockpit bulkhead, usually with a remark to the engineer "You don't mind if I move this do you?" (as if it were in the way sitting on the cockpit floor.)
Any courteous engineer would defer to the captain or first officer agreeably, of course.
It would only be evident after touchdown (after the airplane had cooled down an shrunk back to normal length) while trying to vacate the cockpit at the end of the duty period that the engineer would discover that his 8"-wide flight bag (now squeezed between the desk and bulkhead) could not be removed from the cockpit until the airplane was airborne again.

'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.
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention.
An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons.

- rupertjl
- Posts: 384
- Joined: Thu Jun 17, 2004 5:29 pm
I've been fortunate enough to break the sound barrier on a few occassions, a couple times in the F/A-18 Hornet and most recently the USN Test Pilot School T-38C. After the first time, it kinda looses it's luster, I'm not sure why I thought it would be any different but it does smooth out the ride and the only indication you get is the Mach meter reading 1.0.
As for aviation feats, how about the tiltrotors and helos? I still don't trust them to fly in them but there has to be some type of aviation magic happening there right?
As for aviation feats, how about the tiltrotors and helos? I still don't trust them to fly in them but there has to be some type of aviation magic happening there right?
1950 170A: N9191A s/n 19366
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