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What was that tv show where the main character had a sea plane?
Tales of the gold monkey.....
Tales of the Golden monkey?
Sat evening on the sofa with my Dad.
Worthers anyone?
Tales of the Gold Monkey.
Aren't those flying boats?*
*I think think flying boats use the fuselage as a hull, and sea planes use floats on the wings
Ekranoplan in 5....
4....
3....
Ooooh! He changed his answer. 😆
Sorry, sneaky edit..
Don't know what this plane is, but it's from Calshot (near me) and part of the Schneider trophy.
😯Don't know what this plane is, but it's from Calshot (near me) and part of the Schneider trophy.
That's a Supermarine S6-B, Schneider Trophy winner, and an extraordinarily beautiful aircraft!
Designed by Mitchell, it led directly to the Spitfire:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supermarine_S.6B
Science Museum, London.
Those were the days...
Boeing 314 Clipper
Maia and Mercury
Short Empire flying boat with Short Mercury floatplane
http://www.acmp.com/blog/short-transcontinental-mail-composite-aircraft.html
Macchi MC-72
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Lean, and very deadly, one crashed, one blew up in mid air, the surviving aircraft, and pilot, eventually set an absolute speed record for a piston-engined seaplane that's never been beaten, at 441mph.
From the sublime, etc...
Dornier DO-X
Not a winner in the elegant good looks competition.
I used to love 'Tales of the Gold Monkey' when I was a kid. The plane was a Grunman Goose:
I agree with CountZero, great looking plane
Spent many an hour on the beach at Puerto Pollenca watching one of these practicing....
[url= https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1565/25409118313_c8d5a33b20.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1565/25409118313_c8d5a33b20.jp g"/> [/img][/url]
^^^ D-ICKS
This is how to land one...
@bikebouy you never cease to amaze me 8) As pointed out its the predecessor of the Spitfire, if you google up the Schneider Trophy they used to run it up/down the Solent. FWIW I posted it as my favourite plane in one of the other threads.
Old school friend of mine's Dad used to fly seaplanes for the RAF, the last of them I recall. He had some fantastic pictures around the house.
^^^ D-ICKS
#muttleys****
http://gifrific.com/muttley-laughing/
Ok, how do you post a gif and get it to work?
Been flown around a bit in floatplanes back in the day. Mainly up and down the Newfoundland and Labrador coast. Usually DH Beavers. Lovely landings. Love them.
Landing in them on the sea when frozen on skis is not so good. 😯
Landing in them on the sea when frozen on skis is not so good.
A bit rough?
[b]CZ[/b]. Yes.. The sea doesn't freeze flat... Set off our ELT on one landing and got calls from search and rescue.
CZ. Yes.. The sea doesn't freeze flat... Set off our ELT on one landing and got calls from search and rescue.
Oops! 😳
That SB6...
..Rolls Royce built and experimental engine for it, a whopping 36 litres and designed to output a massive amount of power.
Rolls Royce shelved it as too radical. They built the Merlin, which powered the Hurricane, Lancaster, Mosquito, early Spitfire and the P-51 Mustang.
Later, they dusted the racing engine off, engineered it for reliable running and fitted it to Spitfire prototypes in the early 1940s. It became the Griffon and by the end of the war was outputting a staggering 2,250hp reliably in production form in the Spitfire Mk21. For comparison the early Spitfire 1a and Hurricane 1 output around 990hp.
The Griffon finally left RAF service in 1990 when the Shackleton (itself a development of the Avro Lancaster/Lincoln line) was retired.
Flew for an hour in a amphibious floatplane for my PPL re validation flight a few years back .
180 np two seat Husky (super cub on steroids)
Brilliant fun, especially the skating alternating on each float before taking off and looking back at the crescent shaped ripples we had just made along the loch !
Cool story
Another flying boat, the Boeing 314 'Clipper'
From a time when getting a flight was a touch more glamorous than it is today:
"The seats could be converted into 36 bunks for overnight accommodation. The 314s had a lounge and dining area, and the galleys were crewed by chefs from four-star hotels. Men and women were provided with separate dressing rooms, and white-coated stewards served five and six-course meals with gleaming silver service."
I do like a good seaplane or for that matter WIGE craft (Lloyds count them as seacraft so I'm not being first to post the Ekranoplan here). Excellent so far, keep them coming.
Those Russian things are terrifying.
It's the Catalina for me, a lovely looking aircraft.
Here's one taking off then landing on Lake Geneva:
Since when was a hovercraft or an ekranoplan a seaplane?
Spent today at Duxford today. They've got a Catalina in USAAF colours (which i gather still flies) as well as the amazing Sunderland!
Indeed the Cat at Duxford does fly, I volunteer with the team that operate it and get to fly on it regularly.
I like. A lot.
It's the same aircraft as the one as the in the You Tube above flying of Lake Geneva.
Any ideas why it's painted in American colours? I gather it's an ex-RAF frame...?
@Gary_C A Hovercraft crossing was always referred to as a flight and it was across water.
Therefore a Hovercraft is a seaplane. IMHO of course.
I always liked the Martin Seamaster.
Developed to use the sea if the Russians destroyed all the airfields but never really went it to service due to rapid development of ICBMs.
@Duffer, actually it's an ex-Royal Canadian Air Force aircraft. It's painted in the colours of a famous USAF example, 433915, 'Miss Pick Up' which operated out of Halesworth in Suffolk during the war.
There's chapter and verse here, if you fancy a read :
http://www.catalina.org.uk/history-of-44-33915/
Cheers !
My Grandfather flew a Walrus for the Fleet Air Arm during the war. Lovely quote from Wikipedia:
[i]"The Walrus was affectionately known as the "Shagbat" or sometimes "Steam-pigeon"; the latter name coming from the steam produced by water striking the hot Pegasus engine."[/i]
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Not the most exciting example. But this plane had just dropped us off in the middle of know where in New Zealnd
[url= https://farm9.staticflickr.com/8021/7467505170_6268a6f098_h.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm9.staticflickr.com/8021/7467505170_6268a6f098_h.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/cnSV89 ]Float Plane leaving us in Dusky Sound[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/john_clinch/ ]John Clinch[/url], on Flickr
@Gary_C A Hovercraft crossing was always referred to as a flight and it was across water.
Therefore a Hovercraft is a seaplane. IMHO of course.
But it 'takes off' & lands on hard standing so it isn't a seaplane IMHO 😉
BBC i player currently has 'first of the few' about RJ Mitchell which has some nice contemporary footage of the Supermarines.
But it 'takes off' & lands on hard standing so it isn't a seaplane IMHO
So does the Catalina and the Goose, you can't argue that they're not seaplanes. Technically they're amphibious aircraft, but they're still seaplanes.
[url=
duck[/url]
Kermit Weeks flying his Grumman Duck pt1 🙂




























