Wow (US W11 finds)

dudley

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A friend just stopped by and had been cleaning out a deceased neighbours barn. An Oneida LTD beak point M1905 bayo 10in and an M2 International flare and signal flare gun. Awesome
 
next thing you know, someone will find a TIGER MOTH in a haystack- or hanging from the rafters
 
Thats horrible Man.

yes, but it's a DIFFERENT set of rules for flying a 'moth than your standard aircraft- so it's not entirely unexpected- that aircraft is presicely WHY graduates of the empire air training program were such good pilots- but you had to be instructed on how to fly that thing, and i'm surprised that he DIED out of the experience- their CRASHABILITY WAS EXCELLENT( crashability- the ability to crash an aircraft and walk away)
 
Yea;sad that your pal died......but when I think about it....What a way to go!:D I can only think of one other way that would be preferable to passing behind the stick of an aircraft like that!:D.......that's 80yrs old and piloting a much newer,younger,faster ride:p
 
next thing you know, someone will find a TIGER MOTH in a haystack- or hanging from the rafters

Funny you should mention that. When I was a kid, a Sopwith Camel was found hanging from the rafters in a barn just outside Hillsborough, New Brunswick. Presumably someone had bought it war surplus for personal use in the 1920's.

Weird things sometimes DO happen ;)
 
Funny you should mention that. When I was a kid, a Sopwith Camel was found hanging from the rafters in a barn just outside Hillsborough, New Brunswick. Presumably someone had bought it war surplus for personal use in the 1920's.

Weird things sometimes DO happen ;)

if it was the prairies, i could understand it- a lot of trainers were used to checking fence lines after the war, ( they couldn't use fighters) and were hoisted up into the loft or buried beneath a haystack when the fabric went bad- the fighters and bombers were typically de- activated- that meant sawing through the main spar and removing the engines- a "civilian couldn't posess a "war machine"- but the trainers were just slow enough to do fence work- and the flying clubs got the harvards
 
I used to play in the cockpit of an old, dilapidated Tiger Moth that was kept in the loft of the barn....this was the late sixties near Saskatoon. Long gone now, supposedly someone bought it to restore....
 
Growing up as a kid in Saskatchewan, we used to play in the pasture of my buddy's that had an old Bren gun carrier.
 
After the war my granfather and his brothers bought a few old trainers fron the bombing and gunnery school 2 km away. My great grandfather was a bit worried that they'd end up killing themselves if they ever got it them running as they were still teens. He ended up selling them.
 
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