Aviation News — September 2017

(Rick Simeone) #1
accident. An A-10, F-35, and two P-51s
performed a Missing Man tribute to Lenoch
and Root.

STAR TURN
On a much brighter note, this year’s
headliner was the US Navy’s Blue
Angels. Other  rsts included a Falcon 8X
demonstrator, as well as an RAF Airbus
A400M Atlas.
Aircraft designer Burt Rutan’s name is
often synonymous with odd-looking aircraft,
and his high-altitude Proteus was certainly
no exception. Also high on the “unusual-
looking aircraft list” was the Boeing L-15

Scout. A total of 12 were built in the late
1940s, and it was the last production
propeller-driven aircraft constructed by the
manufacturer. This is the only one that
remains  ying.
Each night, Theater in the Woods
hosted educational events. Presentations
included a tribute to the life and times of
Bob Hoover and a salute to the men of
the Doolittle raid on the 75th anniversary
of this remarkable combat mission.
Sixteen B-25 bombers took off from a
US Navy carrier to bomb Tokyo, just four
months after the Japanese attacked Pearl
Harbor.

Perhaps the most noteworthy evening
involved a panel discussion about Project
Apollo, which succeeded in putting a
man on the Moon. Seven of the original
astronauts who were involved in the
pioneering space  ights took part.
Which aircraft travelled the furthest to
attend? Arguably that distinction went to
the Breitling DC-3-277B (HB-IRJ) from
Switzerland, which  ew east via Asia and
across the Paci c Ocean. It was delivered
to American Airlines in 1940, and served
with with several operators, including Trans-
Texas Airways and Provincetown-Boston
Airlines (PBA).

50 Aviation News incorporating Jets September 2017

Above: A rare American-registered Dornier DO28 A-1 (N12828) from
Fulwiler Air was an interesting visitor.
Left: Flagship Detroit DC-3A (NC17334), owned by the Flagship
Detroit Foundation, was originally built for American Airlines, with the
passenger door located on the right-hand side of the fuselage.
Bottom: Probably the strangest-looking aircraft was the Scaled
Composites Proteus (N281PR), designed by innovator Burt Rutan. It
was  rst  own in 1998 and was designed as a high-altitude, long-
duration telecommunications relay platform.

Two P-63s (N6763 and NX191H) and a
P-39 (N6968), all owned by the American
Airpower Heritage Flying Museum,
appear together in formation.

48-50_oshkoshDC.mfDC.mfDC.indd 50 04/08/2017 16:15

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