WWII War Birds - pics and video

The Avro Anson:

avro-anson-652.jpg


Trainer, light bomber, coastal patroller, general dogsbody:

1952681_orig.jpg


bc-avro-anson30nw.jpg


SkisandFloats132.jpg


Avro%20Canada%20Anson.jpg


500px-AVION_COTC_IE.jpg


avro-anson-no-67-squadron-laverton-1945.jpg


23.jpg


K6166.jpg


Many of you will have seen pictures of the Ansons mating. Not uncommon, as they were an indiscrete aircraft...

piggybackansons.jpg


...and were not afraid to attempt mating with larger aircraft when necessity demanded it.

large.jpg


Postwar, they were a moderately successful light freighter/passenger type, particualrly here and in Australia.

Anson-0001.JPG


East_West_Pozieres_crash.jpg


Mr. Tommy Fox of Associated Airways was the sole creator and operator of the "clipped wing" version of the Anson, GF-EKO, operating out of Edmonton. In 1945, he landed badly at Ft. Chip and tore 9-ish feet off the end of the starboard wing. At -50c, he trimmed the other to match, faired the ends over, and flew (at full power the whole way) nearly as fat as Ft. Mac, but ran low on fuel and had to land on the Athabasca. Fuel was flown to him and he continued on to Ft. Mac, then Edmonton.

There are fifteen still about in various stares of repair. At least one still flies:

ardmore-2012_51.jpg
 
Last edited:
de Havilland almost never stepped wrong. Nearly everything they built was lovely to look at.

The DH Express:

DH86-A31-7-The-Argus-via-Gerry-Kersey-KOM.jpg


The Albatross - one of the few things on the planet on the same aesthetic level as the Lockheed Constellation and Ms. Sophia Loren:

de-havilland-dh91-forbisher-flight.jpg


The Hornet - horny little sister of the Mosquito:

De_Havilland_Hornet_F1.jpg


The acceptable Flamingo:

large_000000.jpg


Nice looking aircraft.
 
These days, most cars look much the same. It's a function of aerodynamic efficiency, I guess.

Ditto many 2 or 3 seater WW2 era recce/bombing aircraft. That SAAB looks an awful like many other aircraft, and on floats, very Aichi, or Kingfisherish. Just so many ways to cram three guys into an airplane that does what these did.

212-S17BS4LL.jpg


212-S17BS1LL.jpg


Japo_Aichi_E16A_1.jpg


Ar-196A-2


Kingfisher_os2u_Museum_colour.jpg
 
I went to the Air and Space museum about 7 years ago. I found a few of my pictures from the time, and here is one of my favorites.

Here is the wing section of a HE-162 just sitting out for all to see. I wonder if they have it out front now or if its hidden away.
oeI0RAg.jpg
 
Back
Top Bottom