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Moorabbin Air Museum
Or to give it the correct name, Australian National Aviation Museum... has an excellent collection of aircraft, I spotted this great diorama with the standard C15A model next to the very real and very impressive Beaufighter.
http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2847/1...0c4a5eeb_c.jpg http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5528/1...cdfa575a_c.jpg http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7299/1...884dcbbd_c.jpg |
Model
Here's the 1/32 model:
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3759/1...ce45e51f_c.jpg And the 1:1 version as seen through the restored front section of one of two Beauforts held in the collection: http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3809/1...b1dc6e7d_c.jpg Neither Beaufort is complete although they have enough parts to eventually build two static examples. |
Looks as though they have some dedicated and talented people down there.
I wish them well. David |
Talent
They sure do, although the Beaufort cockpit was restored by Ralph Cusack and his team.
One of the things they will be doing more of is firing up some of the engines which will be worth seeing. |
Museum
I rode my push bike there more than once in the 1960's as a kid . The main attraction was a complete static display Mustang , they had a walkway rigged up over a wing so visitors could peek inside the cockpit . At the time there were a few relics of aircraft at the museum, nothing to rave about , but it was a beginning .
Around 1970 they had a airshow there , during the parachute jump display, a chute became tangled and the whole crowd watched in horror as he plummeted to earth . He managed to unbuckle the chute and he deployed his backup chute about 500 feet above the ground ..it was a close thing . The commentator on the loudspeakers at the show was Brian Naylor the channel 7 TV newsreader who later perished in the black Saturday bushfires . Mike |
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I was there too
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I took a few pictures with my 2 1/4 square Welmy 6 camera and could not wait for the photos to be ready at the chemist, riding my bike there a couple of times a day. The Mustang you mentioned Mike was of course the famous Fleetwings garage machine which had been rescued by Dick Hourigan and restored by Judy Pay's Old Aeroplane Company. As a 15 year old I could never have imagined as I stood intently peering into the cockpit I would one day fly in the back seat of this same aircraft. Dick had to 'rescue' this aircraft again from the Museum back in the late 60s or early 70s by craning it over the fence and it was stored for some time in Mildura. |
Fly in Mustang
Back in 2005 There was a air show in Swanhill and I was lucky enough to be the first passenger up in the 2 seater Mustang and showed the pilot around the area :-)
WOW will never forget that as long as I live Tim |
Air Show
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The Anson I do recall . For the airshow, they organized a low atlitude pylon race around the airfield perimeter and the Anson was last by a long way . That Anson was a Bass Strait veteran, it flew over to King Island on a regular basis , it was modified to meet safety standards - the wing spars being upgraded and it was re engined too. I went with a friend . A few days before the show, I actually rang the airport to confirm the P51 would be flying . |
Anson
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The Anson I believe was re-sparred with Canadian spars which were metal. EDIT: It was fitted with Avro Anson XIX parts: "Work commenced in 1961, using a spare Avro XIX metal mainplane and tailplane purchased from RAAF stores in Adelaide, left over from the two Avro XIXs used by the RAAF at Woomera, VM374 & VM375. Avro XIX style windows and the fitting of Cheetah XV engines completed the modification. The conversion was finally finished and the highly modified "new" VH-BAF took to the air at Moorabbin in May 1963." Here's how it looked around the time we saw it... [IMGhttp://www.edcoatescollection.com/ac1/austb/VH-BAF5.jpg[/IMG] Link with more info. And how it looks now, after a very authentic restoration by New Zealander Bill Reid. http://www.classicwings.com/images/n...2012-anson.jpg Link This pic was taken by Gavin Conroy who was sitting in front of me in the Caribou last November. |
Correcting the pic
This is more like how it looked when we saw it.
http://www.edcoatescollection.com/ac1/austb/VH-BAF5.jpg |
show
The kid who went to the airshow with me was more interested in eating hot dogs than looking at the aeroplanes .We rode our bikes there as we lived in Sandringham , not too far away .
That same kids father was a licensed surveyor and he flew over to King Island many times in that same Anson for work reasons . I think it scared the crap out of him every time he flew in it . I do recall somebody at that show doing stunt flying a Cessna of all things, he threw it all over the sky and it handled it well . One of the VMVC members ( unnamed ) was in the ATC during WW2 , his mob, pimple faced youths , all went went down to Sale or Bairnsdale two years running for their annual flight . The first time he went up in a Airspeed Oxford which went OK, the next trip was in a Anson and he said it was vibrating so badly they all thought it was about to fall apart . White faces and ground kissing stuff . Mike |
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