Normalfornorfolk
Well-Known Member
It shows what a clumsy beast the Meteor was though.
A picture tells you that?
Clumsy was it? Cetainly not a view held by those that flew them...
It shows what a clumsy beast the Meteor was though.
I take it that your friends weren't involved with the one per week that crashed.A picture tells you that?
Clumsy was it? Cetainly not a view held by those that flew them...
I can't imagine what connection an anecdotal accident rate has to do with an aeroplane's menoeuverability.I take it that your friends weren't involved with the one per week that crashed.
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I did see that 73 Sqn managed to lose six Venoms in one day just before Christmas 54 in Iraq !
The losses in the post war years were amazing – quoting from Broken Wings….
1945 592 a/c lost 638 fatalities
1946 1014 677
1947 420 176
1948 424 205
1949 438 224
1950 380 238
1951 490 280
1952 507 318
1953 483 333
1954 452 283
1955 305 182
1956 270 150
1957 233 139
1958 128 87
1959 102 59
1960 80 46
1961 74 55
1962 68 50
1963 60 41
1964 62 33
1965 46 71
1966 62 33
1967 60 60
1968 51 43
1969 31 22
1970 36 25
1971 40 72
Vampires are really cool aircraft. A massive manufacturing and export success for the UK, then we stopped supporting our aircraft industry and now we have to buy from overseas.
On Gannet, Eglinton in '49 we did have a squadron of Seafires and a Sea Vampire as well as Fireflies and Barracudas, I did get a trip in a Barracuda, dummy divebombing over Magilligan Sands at that time.
My brothers used to collect the Aeroplane Spotter during the war. Sadly, many were lost, but I still have 6 months that they had bound. At this stage in the war, teaching young men and boys (mostly) how to spot was considered essential to the war effort. This book is from Jan-Jun 1941, so no Seafires, but I still find it fascinating. The mood changes during the 6 months from deadly serious to the occasionally light-hearted.
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Flight was a bit civilian-orientated for some of us war-conditioned boys around 1952. I used to pore over the RAF Flying Review at a time when the aircraft industry was really interesting. I didn't keep a single one though.I remember an article on Seafires years ago in Flight magazine. It included a photo from the late 50s of about two dozen Seafires on the dump at Baldonnel airfield near Dublin. All were flown in and scrapped.
Flight was a bit civilian-orientated for some of us war-conditioned boys around 1952. I used to pore over the RAF Flying Review at a time when the aircraft industry was really interesting. I didn't keep a single one though.
I have most annual Reviews from the late 40s to late 60s. Happy to lend them to you. They make for sad reading in many respects; rather a narrative of decline.