Aircraft Identification

Mjg2011

Pre-Flight
Joined
Apr 28, 2020
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Display name:
Mjg2011
upload_2020-12-30_13-28-27.jpeg

Identify this aircraft and post another picture.
 
skylark2 edited2.jpg I photoshopped out the name, but left an N-number for those who want to cheat. :)

Ron Wanttaja
 
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Why is the N-number on the tail different from the N-number on the wing?
I said I'd left *an* N-number unchanged. I twiddled the one on the tail when I erased the maker logo. Hopefully, there were a few raised eyebrows among those who tried to look it up.

Jeff got the ID right.

Ron Wanttaja
 
I said I'd left *an* N-number unchanged. I twiddled the one on the tail when I erased the maker logo. Hopefully, there were a few raised eyebrows among those who tried to look it up.

Ron Wanttaja
Looks like the same Piper Cub either way. ;)
 
upload_2020-12-30_18-26-45.jpeg
Experimental but still identifiable.
 
There used to be an A700 parked on the ramp at Skagit (KBVS). Theres a tractor trailer with the Adam company logo and a mural of the A700 parked in a lot in the nearby town of La Conner. I have no idea what ever became of the rest of the company's assets.
 
Here's one:

50782182037_2d8ed5bcac_c.jpg
 
How about this one....
 

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Another easy one.
It's a Lockheed Y1C-23.

The Lockheed Y1C-23 ‘Altair’ was the designation given to the sole DL-2 Altair after it was purchased by the USAAC.

The 'Altair' was an improved version of the Lockheed 8 Sirius, originally produced at the request of Charles Lindbergh. The basic Sirius was a low wing monoplane with a wooden fuselage and a fixed undercarriage. At the same time Lindbergh requested the production of a modified wing with a retractable undercarriage that could be swapped for the fixed undercarriage version. In the end Lindburgh never used the alternative wing, and so Lockheed installed it on a Sirius to produce the first Altair.

This second aircraft was produced by converting an existing Lockheed DL-2 'Sirius' (NR8494). The DL-2 was produced after Lockheed had been taken over by the Detroit Aircraft Company, with DL-2 standing for 'Detroit Lockheed Model 2' (the DL-1 was an improved version of the Lockheed Vega). The DL-2 had a metal fuselage and wooden wing, and tandem enclosed cockpits. It was originally used as a company demonstrator between August 1930 and April 1931.

In the spring of 1931 the aircraft was given a new retractable undercarriage and a 500hp Pratt & Whitney SR-1340E engine. Later in 1931 the aircraft was purchased by the Army Air Corps. It went to Wright Field for service testing, and then moved to Bolling Field, where it was used as a staff transport. It was used by the Assistant Secretary of War (Frederick Huff Payne until 1933 and then Harry Hines Woodring), the Chief of the Air Corps and other senior officers, and logged 1,075 flying hours. During this period it made at least five wheels-up landings, but survived intact. It eventually became a ground instructional airframe at Chanute Field, Illinois, before being scrapped at the Middletown Air Depot in Pennsylvania in June 1942.

Engines: Pratt & Whitney SR-1340E
Power: 500hp
Crew: 1
Wing span: 42ft 9in
Length: 28ft 4in
Height: 9ft 6in
Empty weight: 3,235lb
Gross weight: 4,896lb
Cruising speed: 175mph
Payload: 1,290lb/ 1 or 2 passengers
 
Here's a video of the BO-102 which was a tethered trainer. The 103 is the full flying version with a few mods.
 
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