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AAHS Journal, Vol. 50, No. 4 - Winter 2005 Table of Contents
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The Barkley-Grow T8P-l was one of those innovative products of the American aircraft industry in the 1930s that started with much promise. But it never emerged from the shadow of its two competitors, the Lockheed L-12 and especially the Beech Model 18. THREE CANDIDATES COME FORWARD Three manufacturers started work. Beech produced the Model 18, Lockheed the L-12 Electra Junior and Barkley-Grow the T8P-l. The competition was won by the L-12 based on its performance, but also because with a great deal of effort Lockheed had managed to get the first aircraft into the air on June 27, 1936, three days before the Bureau’s deadline. The first Beech 18 did not make its first flight until January 20, 1937, and the T8P-1 took to the air in April of that year. Both were therefore eliminated. As it turned out, the Beech with its two . . . . |
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The year 1935 was a notable one in the history of commercial aviation. It was also a notable year for aviation enthusiasts with record flights and performances. Amelia Earhart set the pattern on January 11, when she made the first solo flight from Honolulu to Oakland, with her Lockheed Vega. On the 15th of that month, Major James Doolittle, with two passengers aboard flew an American Airlines plane from Los Angeles to New York City, nonstop, in eleven hours fifty-nine minutes, just barely breaking the twelve-hour mark for commercial transports. This record was broken a month later with an American Airlines crew who made the trip in eleven hours and thirty-four minutes. |
![]() TWA Douglas DC-1, NC223Y |
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Evolution of the Liaison-Type Airplane, 1917-1944: Part II
The history of the Air Corps interest in light airplanes dates back as early as 1929, when the Materiel Division conducted an extensive survey to determine the possibilities of using light commercial aircraft in lieu of existing specialized training equipment. Despite the fact that 40 manufacturers expressed an interest in the project, the division found only one model that was at all suitable. All others contained objectionable features, for the most part structural members that did not conform to Army-Navy material specifications. Taken collectively, the utter lack of standardization and interchangeability presented a most serious objection to the use of commercial aircraft for military use, and the division gave up the
idea. |
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Delta Flight 1080 Jammed Elevator Incident I was the captain of Flight 1080, San Diego, Calif. (SAN), to Los Angeles, Calif. (LAX), on April 12, 1977, that experienced a serious control problem in the pitch axis immediately after takeoff – at night, over water, on instruments – that appeared to be almost certain disaster.The other flight crewmembers were First Officer Will Radford and Second Officer Steve
Heidt. |
![]() Delta Airlines Lockheed L-1011 |
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Lockheed 12A, c/n 1287, Electra Junior This classic aircraft has recently been seen at the Paris Air Show in 2003 and 2005 and the Flying Legend Air Show weekends in 2004 and
2005. |
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Following the “life” of the Lockheed 12A, #1287/F-AZLL, I wondered how many of these classic planes were “Survivors” today. Research soon found that almost fifty examples may be found in the United States, Canada, Australia and France. Searching my picture files, I found several of these and I am sure there will be many additions.
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The Navy's Striking Eagles Squadron, Part III While Col. Merritt Edson’s raiders reduced the pressure from the direction east of Vandegrift’s perimeter, many enemy troops continued to threaten. Frightened natives reported Japanese moving from the south and southwest toward the Marine lines around Henderson and Fighter One airfields. The main assault struck the re-grouped Raiders and paratroops who defended what came to be called Edson’s Ridge. These troops backed by engineer and pioneer Marines and later, the 2nd Battalion, 5th Marines, held on against ferocious attacks by a fanatic enemy. Blasts of 105mm artillery fire from the field guns of the 11th Marines assisted. At dawn on September 14, three worn but still flyable Army P-400s contributed to the defeat of Kawaguchi’s brigade with bursts of 20mm cannon and machine gun fire. As the sun rose, the exhausted surviving Marines of Edson’s command looked out upon a jungle battlefield littered with hundreds of dead Japanese soldiers. This hard-fought victory saved Henderson Field and assisted in the victory to
come. |
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Russ Hiatt's WWII Aircraft Photos from France Russ Hiatt, a Life Member of AAHS, a USAAF veteran of WWII, aviation photographer and a great guy passed away in early 2005. Because of the generosity of Bob Kennedy who now has the Hiatt Collection and Gerald Liang who did the darkroom work, we can share these photos with the AAHS
Membership.
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The North American T-28 Trojan During World War II, the North American AT-6 Texan, single-engine, two-seat aircraft, trained thousands of aviation cadets to fly before they transitioned onto advanced flight training in fighters, transports or bombers (two or four engine). By the end of production, over 17,000 units had been built. Navy variants were designated SNJs. While U.S. services referred to this training aircraft as the Texan, the British referred to it as the Harvard. In 1948, in the same move that eliminated AT, BT and PT designations, the Texan was redesignated as T-6. Modified Texans redesignated as LT-6Gs were used during the Korean War, 1950-1953, in the role as a forward air control (FAC). There they provided supporting artillery units with target coordinates from “upstairs.” However, by this time, it was nearing the end of its operational lifespan.1 The AT-6, designed in the 1930s, needed to be replaced. A new design was needed to train the next generation of pilots before they went on to flying turbojet aircraft. North American Aviation engineers, after WWII, began designing a new aircraft to replace the AT-6. The XT-28 made its first test flight on September 26, 1949. The U.S. Air Force adopted this aircraft as its primary, or initial pilot training aircraft, referring to it as the T-28A Trojan, in 1950. This aircraft closely simulated a feel for the pilot of what to expect in turbojet aircraft: a tricycle landing gear, . . . . .
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Remember When . . . Waco Aristocraft For those of us who recall the period, a boom in general aviation was to take place following World War II. It was anticipated that returning airmen would trade their wartime aircraft, flown in hostile skies, for light planes flown over peaceful American terrain. The return of many veteran pilots, aviators and airmen were to be the catalyst behind the figurative statement “an airplane in every garage,” and it gave impetus to artists’ conceptions of smiling families flying to vacation destinations in futuristic light planes. Aviation magazines of the day reinforced this vision by depicting modern-day housing developments with a runway and individual taxiways leading up to each new home. |