The nose sections of both the Arrow (#206) and the Jetliner are on display at the aviation museum in Ottawa. You can clearly see the torch marks where they were hacked off from the fuselage. Such a waste.
My best friend in highschool and I both were accepted at Carleton University for Aerospace Engineering. I decided spending the rest of my career in committee meetings designing landing gear for Boeing in Winnipeg wasn't that appealing so I went off to greener pastures. My friend however stuck with it and got his Ph.D.. .....And then he tried to find a job in Canada as an Aerospace Engineer. A fully bilingual one at that too.
Nothing. Zip. Zilch. From coast to coast, a stone cold dead industry in Canada.
Guess who was more than happy to give him multiple job offers? You got it, our friends to the South. And that's where he is today, plying his trade. He really wanted to stay here and contribute to Canada's success, but in the end he just had to go where the work was.
So here we are, all these years later, the continuing legacy of the Avro Arrow saga.
Brookwood
[/URL][/IMG]![]()
[/URL][/IMG]![]()
[/URL][/IMG]![]()
Those are even sadder than looking at the old pictures of the aircraft graveyards after the war. Yeash, what a waste