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DRINKS WITH THE PRIME MINISTER: Here’s a tale with a happy ending to brighten your weekend.
The year is 1953. Your name is Ron Short (first picture), and you are a young Kiwi pilot officer posted to the most exotic RNZAF station on offer – beautiful Cyprus.
You’ve just performed a successful ‘jetobatics’ routine in your de Havilland Vampire with your colleagues from No. 14 Squadron for the then Prime Minister Sir Sidney Holland and you’re preparing to land.
It is at this point you discover the landing gear is faulty, your wheels are stuck, and you’ve got no option other than a wheels-up landing.
Geoffrey Bentley, RNZAF historian, describes what happened next: “Before a startled and anxious Prime Minister the pilot brought his Vampire down with its wheels still folded up. It was a skilful and impressive landing ; little damage was sustained and Short was unhurt.
“Sir Sidney was one of the first to reach the scene and congratulate a very shaken flying officer and lead him by the arm towards the civil air terminal and a timely drink.’’
A casual drink with the Prime Minister may not be a textbook way to recover from stress, but this was the 1950s after all!
So why were the Kiwis in Cyprus?
The RNZAF, at the request of the British Government, sent No. 14 Squadron to Cyprus between October 1952 and May 1955 as part of a strategic show of force in the region. In 1955 the squadron moved to Singapore as priorities changed.
Cyprus is still a strategic base for the Royal Air Force because its location provides a perfect staging base for the Middle East.
According to everyone involved in the RNZAF at the time it was the best posting ever.
The images from our collection are from Sir Sidney's visit in 1953 and from the squadron's time in Cyprus.
#cyprus #dehavillandvampire #rnzaf #raf ... See MoreSee Less
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THE PENGUIN: New Zealand is home to several species of penguins. But the rarest of them all was not an animal at all.
In March 1917, a Bleriot XI aircraft (similar to the type which had first flown the English Channel in 1909) arrived at the under-construction aerodrome of the Canterbury Aviation Company at Sockburn, Christchurch.
It had been purchased by the company for flying instruction, having arrived in New Zealand in 1912 and passed through the hands of several owners.
In the end, the company adopted the Caudron as the standard aircraft to be operated and after a few flights, the Bleriot had its wings 'clipped'.
#bleriot #canterburyaviationcompany
It became what was known as a 'Penguin'.
The reduced span of its wings would not allow it to fly but it could still taxi around and be used to teach the flying controls while safely on the ground, just like a simulator today.
We know little about its history, but the museum has a signed fragment of propellor believed to be from the aircraft, which suggest it had at least one mishap.
It seems to have been the custom that busted propellors were cut up and signed by those involved, as we have other damaged, signed propellors from Sockburn.
The Penguin is believed to have been scrapped in 1920.
Image 1: Canterbury Aviation Company aircraft outside hangars at Sockburn Aerodrome. The Penguin is on the right-hand side, without a fabric covering. WgF17
Image 2: Propeller fragment signed by pupils at the Canterbury (NZ) Aviation Company, Sockburn. Believed to be off the reduced span Bleriot, known as the Penguin, used for taxiing/ ground control training at the Canterbury Aviation School (sic).
Manufacturer's stamp on front reads "HEL GREMONT / 6 PASSAGE JOSSEAUME / PARIS". Signed on reverse by D. C. Buckley, G. A. Smith and A. C. Parsons. Letter "A." written further down fragment below signatures. Associated with Second Lieutenant Arthur Gordon Webster. 1996/108.2 ... See MoreSee Less
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Interesting history.
URGENT CLARIFICATION: With air show season upon us, we’ve had a request from a (presumably) colour-blind reader to urgently clarify the difference between an RNZAF Black Falcon and an RNZAF Gold Falcon.
This confusion is not surprising as you can see from the picture. As well as sharing the Falcon name both machines are show ponies and crowd pleasers.
The first difference, and you will kick yourself once it is pointed out, is these Falcons are different colours.
The Black Falcon is a Beechcraft T-6C Texan II aircraft used as a trainer by day and an aerobatic display aircraft when it is air show time. At that point it becomes a Black Falcon.
The Gold Falcon is every bit an RNZAF icon as well. A 1981 Ford Falcon by day, this machine was painted gold to match TA-4K Skyhawk NZ6256 in time for the RNZAF’s 50th anniversary air show in 1987.
Aside from their colour, the second major difference between the Gold Falcon and the Black Falcon lies under their bonnets.
A Black Falcon is powered by a Pratt and Whitney Canada PT6A-68 turboprop, and the little Beechcraft can get along at 586 km/h.
The Gold Falcon was powered by a Ford 3.3 litre straight-six engine, with 107 horses under the bonnet capable of propelling the gold flash at 160km/h with the jandal in the flat position.
The final difference is in their capacity. A Black Falcon is strictly a two-seater. The Gold Falcon, a generously proportioned Aussie, was legally a five-seater but had an unofficial capacity of 11 small air cadets or eight average-sized pilot officers for emergency airfield missions.
So there you have it. Thanks to our reader for the request. We hope this helps!
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The last Ford Falcon to have the 200 cubic inch motor was the XC. The car you show had a 250 cubic inch or 4.2 cc engine. Probably does not mean much as there seams to be difficultly working out the difference between planes and cars engines so getting the correct car engine must be a minor problem.
The gold falcon can aslo carry 4 crates of beer, a sack of mussels, and 2 staffordshires in the boot👍
And one is fuelled by LPG or CNG by the looks too
The Black Falcon also had functional door handles
Does anyone know if the Gold Falcon is the same car we in Europe had as Ford Granada Mk2, they look very much alike in the picture. If so we had 2 engine choices, 2 litre pinto engine and a german built 2,8 litre V6 with 150 horses.
and the 50th anniversary A4 was painted in B&H gold with resene enamel gloss
I found it interesting that the gold Falcon has its prop (or fan) behind the cowling (or grill). These subtle differences can make it difficult to distnguish between them to the untrained eye
My god im old. I was at that airshow as a cadet!
How do their service ceilings compare?
Andrew AJ Massie, I knew you were wondering!!
In these times of heightened tension, correct type recognition is critical. AFMNZ you'll never know how many lives you might be saving 🇳🇿💯👍
And yet you still didn’t explain to the colour blind which is which 🤣
But what happens if Tex Gold/TEXGLD becomes a Black Falcon?? Gold Black Falcon? 🤔 🤔
My late father had a falcon gl like that
Thomas Geoffrey Hornblow the more ya know
Got photos off xd and skyhawk carey took on the day then
facts
I wish I had seen this 2 days ago before the Black Falcons did a fly over display on Ngāmotu. There was much confusion
As a young Student JobSearch labourer attached to 2SQN at Ohakea in 1986-87 summer, I was lucky enough to work on both golden jubilee celebration machines … armed with a bucket of polishing cloths after they came out of the paint shop. Polishing a Skyhawk was quite a job!
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