The prototype Spitfire made its maiden flight on 5th March 1936 and in May 1996 an airshow was held at Duxford in Cambridgeshire to commemorate the 60th anniversary of this event.
Duxford was a particularly poignant venue as it was, as mentioned in an earlier post, the first RAF station to operate the Spitfire.On the weekend that the show was held the weather was kind and a great display was put on culminating in a flypast of twenty plus Spitfires.
I took over a hundred photographs on the Sunday with my old Pentax P.30 SLR film camera and recently sorted through them and scanned most into my computer and have now put them together as a slide show on YouTube which you can see here. Not all of the pictures are of the best quality but non-the-less they are are record of the event.
If you would prefer to see these photos at a more leisurely pace and higher resolution they can be viewed as a set on Flickr.
About this website.
Aviation History, Aircraft Preservation and Old Aeroplanes are the subjects of this website. Generally it is concerned with aircraft that were designed before 1965, although some may still be in service. The selection of subjects is unashamedly influenced by the author's preferences and favorite aircraft.
Friday, 14 May 2010
Monday, 10 May 2010
Have you ever wanted to own a Spitfire?
It is certainly and attractive idea for any aviation enthusiast but you would need a very substantial fortune indeed to fulfill such a dream. Last year, April 2009, an airworthy Spitfire was sold in an auction at the RAF Museum, Hendon by Bonhams auctioneers for over £1.7 million (including fees). The buyer was Steven Brooks a financier and adventurer.
This Spitfire had been salvaged from a scrapyard in South Africa in 1979 by the the South African Air Force and in the subsequent three decades passed through a number of owners being returned to the UK in the early 1980s. Although some initial restoration work was carried out it was the late Paul Portelli, founder of World's End Tiles in London who commissioned Classic Aero Engineering to return aircraft to full flying condition as a two seater, having purchased it in 2002.
Built at Castle Bromwich in November 1944, serial no. SM520, a Mk.IXe, was first delivered to No. 33 Maintenance Unit at RAF Lyneham for service preparation. In 1948 it was sold to the South African Air Force whose records for the aircraft are incomplete, but it is believed that it operated with the serial number 5563. In 1954 it was sold with several other Spitfires to a scrap metal dealer from whose yard it was subsequently recovered.
The announcement of it sale cause quite a stir in the media and BBC Television News carried a report on the aircraft just before the auction.
So, assuming you have financial wherewithal, are there any more Spitfires likely to come on the market that you could purchase?
The answer is almost certainly 'Yes', around the world there are many Spitfires in museums and private collections which will, from time to time, become available. Some may not be airworthy but most will have the potential to be restored to flyable condition, after all this one was virtually scrap metal. Currently the Royal Air Force's Battle of Britain Memorial Flight has two Mk.XVIs which it will eventually restore to flying condition. It is most likely that, when completed, one of these will be sold to help finance the flight.
Of course, having acquired your Spitfire the the costs don't stop at the purchase price, it will require maintenance and hangarage, insurance and if it is going to fly it a Certificate of Airworthiness not to mention fuel. Owning a Spitfire, or for that matter any warbird, makes running a Ferrari look like a poor man's pastime.
For a brief history of the Spitfire's development please see my article on Squidoo.
This work by Roland Turner is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales License.
This Spitfire had been salvaged from a scrapyard in South Africa in 1979 by the the South African Air Force and in the subsequent three decades passed through a number of owners being returned to the UK in the early 1980s. Although some initial restoration work was carried out it was the late Paul Portelli, founder of World's End Tiles in London who commissioned Classic Aero Engineering to return aircraft to full flying condition as a two seater, having purchased it in 2002.
Built at Castle Bromwich in November 1944, serial no. SM520, a Mk.IXe, was first delivered to No. 33 Maintenance Unit at RAF Lyneham for service preparation. In 1948 it was sold to the South African Air Force whose records for the aircraft are incomplete, but it is believed that it operated with the serial number 5563. In 1954 it was sold with several other Spitfires to a scrap metal dealer from whose yard it was subsequently recovered.
The announcement of it sale cause quite a stir in the media and BBC Television News carried a report on the aircraft just before the auction.
So, assuming you have financial wherewithal, are there any more Spitfires likely to come on the market that you could purchase?
The answer is almost certainly 'Yes', around the world there are many Spitfires in museums and private collections which will, from time to time, become available. Some may not be airworthy but most will have the potential to be restored to flyable condition, after all this one was virtually scrap metal. Currently the Royal Air Force's Battle of Britain Memorial Flight has two Mk.XVIs which it will eventually restore to flying condition. It is most likely that, when completed, one of these will be sold to help finance the flight.
Of course, having acquired your Spitfire the the costs don't stop at the purchase price, it will require maintenance and hangarage, insurance and if it is going to fly it a Certificate of Airworthiness not to mention fuel. Owning a Spitfire, or for that matter any warbird, makes running a Ferrari look like a poor man's pastime.
For a brief history of the Spitfire's development please see my article on Squidoo.
This work by Roland Turner is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales License.
Thursday, 6 May 2010
BOAC Promotional Film
Here is a sequence of three videos that I have found on YouTube. They are a complete British Overseas Airways Corporation promotional film from the early 1960s in instalments. There are some nice shots of, then brand new VC-10s, Boeing 707s and a Britannia rigged as freighter having baby elefants among other things loaded.
Of course everything is in the unflapable British stye of the period and everyone has cut glass English accents - not a dropped 'h' to be heard.
Civil Aviation: Boeing 707 and Bac Vc 10
Giclee Print
Hardy, Wilf
24 in. x 18 in.
Buy at AllPosters.com
Of course everything is in the unflapable British stye of the period and everyone has cut glass English accents - not a dropped 'h' to be heard.
Civil Aviation: Boeing 707 and Bac Vc 10
Giclee Print
Hardy, Wilf
24 in. x 18 in.
Buy at AllPosters.com
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