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The Museum of Flight’s B-29

By Paul Tannahill

Boeing B-29, T- Square 54, positioned on the lawn in front of the Museum of Flight on Boeing Field in Seattle, Wash. The aircraft has been encased in thick white plastic, designed to protect the aircraft from the elements, until a suitable indoor location can be found to complete the restoration on this historic veteran. (Nicholas Rosenbladt) Visitors to Boeing Field or The Museum of Flight may have noticed the unmistakable shape of a Boeing B-29 has appeared on the grass in front of the museum. However the shape is just about all visitors may be able to notice, at least for the time being.

The Museum of Flight’s B-29, Serial Number 44-69729, known as T-Square 54 is a combat veteran of World War Two, participated in 37 missions in the Pacific, flying with the 875th Bomb Squadron and 498th Bomb Group. For the Korean conflict, the aircraft was once again called to service, this time reconfigured as an aerial refueling tanker.

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Raymond D. Allen: Flying WWII Veteran Still in the Air Today

By Herb Foreman

Ray Allen with his group of 10.Not many pilots have more flying time from the San Carlos Airport in Northern California than Ray Allen. Born in San Francisco and a graduate from the prestigious Lowell High School, he was at the right age to participate in World War II. Initially, color blindness kept him out of the Air Corps Academy and he began his career as a mechanic at Stockton Field in San Joaquin County on Oct. 28, 1942. After pestering his officers and taking new tests, he was admitted to the “cadet program” as a bombardier and navigator. He attended gunnery school and learned how to strip a 50-caliber machine gun blindfolded. He learned both celestial and dead reckoning navigation and after 105 hours of instruction joined a B-17 crew bound for Europe.

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Contrails

Remembering Orion

By Steve Weaver

Steve and the flying school Citabria in 1969. (Courtesy of Steve Weaver)He walked through the office door at the airport on a hot July afternoon in 1969, looking like a farmer in his late fifties that had climbed down off his tractor and come directly to the airport. All of this turned out to be good detecting on my part, because that was exactly what he was and what he had been doing before he took a ride to see us.

Orion as it turned out had something bothering him, and it had been eating at him for almost twenty five years. He had returned from the big war, gotten married, raised a family and become a successful farmer and business man, but this little piece of his past was always there and it still nibbled away at the little secret spot where a person lives, even after all those years. He confessed to me that afternoon, sitting in the big armchair in my office, that he had washed out of the Army Air Corps flight training. Even after a generation, I could still see the regret and the shame in the faded brown eyes.

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Keeping the Spirit of Aviation Alive: The Kansas Aviation Museum

By Carl E. Chance

What gives an aviation museum spirit, a pervading animating principle? Is it the building, the aircraft displayed, or the artifacts that chronicle the past, telling the story of aviation pioneers and the craft they flew? The Kansas Aviation Museum believes that it’s much more than that.

An aviation museum needs dedicated and creative people who have the vision and the passion, giving rise to what can only be recognized as a profound spirit, evidenced by the daily work in maintaining and growing the historic collections.  The difference magnifying the dimension of that spirit lies in the depth and commitment of the dedicated staff and volunteers in their quest to keep aviation history alive in the present and for future generations.

Spirit is difficult to communicate because it’s so intangible. You know that spirit itself can’t be touched, seen or heard, but when you’re in the midst of a museum that expresses the spirit of aviation, you can sense it. Spirit will manifest itself in various forms as people act on that spirit to do creative works.

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Skies to Stars - June 2012

By Ed Downs

This month’s edition of Skies to Stars diverts from the personal experience of astronomy and takes a quick trip into the wonders of astrophysics.  The big guns at NASA are coming up with some pretty cool stuff that has been shaking up the scientific community.  From almost the beginning of recorded time, our feeble species has wondered, “are there other ‘Earths’ out there?”  Thanks to the Kepler, the Spitzer Space Telescopes and the U.S. portion of the European Space Agency’s Planck mission, that question is being answered. 

The Kepler Space Telescope looks for Earth-size planets in the habitable zone, the region in a planetary system where liquid water could exist on the surface of the planet orbiting around sun-like stars in our galaxy. The Spitzer Space Telescope provides the astronomical community with unique infrared images. Among its many duties is probing the atmospheres of planets beyond our sun. The bottom line is that over 2,300 “planet candidates” have now been discovered.  Some 400 of these planet candidates are presumed to be “Earth-like,” in that they are estimated to be similar to Earth size and in a favorable temperature zone that will support liquid water.  One of these candidates, Kepler 22b, is of particular interest and is known to occupy a habitable zone.  But the following information from a NASA press release is even more exciting because a planet, called 55 Cancri e, has been detected by the presence of its own light.

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Talent, Ambition and Hard Work Spell Success For San Carlos Pilot Mark Schwartz

By Herb Foreman

Mark Schwartz stands by his Debonaire.I have known Mark Schwartz for a number of years now and I am still amazed at the talent in this one man! In a sketch I wrote several years ago, I called him the ultimate entrepreneur. He’s also a musician, mechanic, salesman, pilot, manager, businessman and more.

He bought the original Holland Motors from Bob Holland 35 years ago. It seemed a successful operation so he never changed the name to reflect his own glory. He figured he would just build on what Holland had begun and it worked out well. Building confidence in customers became all-important to him in the conduct of the business.

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Contrails

Flying With the Newly Dead

By Steve Weaver

I don’t know, but when I look back at the almost 50 years I’ve spent in aviation, it seems to me that my career didn’t unfold as it really should have. Rather than the orderly, planned and supervised tempering of my peers, my progression into and through the various aviation endeavors always seemed to happen in spasmodic bursts that often left me with Alice in Wonderland-like bewilderment. Looking around at my next role, as a flight instructor, or a survey pilot or whatever new phase I found myself in, I found myself totally clueless about how to properly proceed.

For one thing, I had no real mentors, other than the odd instructors that popped up at vital times, and then were gone. I was a restless student pilot with my own airplane, and by keeping it at small, out of the way strips I managed to stay under the radar for about 300 hours of dangerous wandering before settling down enough to get my private license. Adding the commercial license seemed like a natural thing to do since my logbook was fat with hours, and when the examiner told me I flew well enough to pass the flight instructor’s exam I decided to get that rating too.

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Goodies and Gadgets - June 2012

AeroLEDs Sunspot Landing Light Lasts 50,000 Hours

The Sunspot 36HX has received PMA approval from the FAA and can be installed on any certificated aircraft.The FAA had granted PMA Certification to AeroLEDs Sunspot 36HX landing light. Powered by new LED technology, the Sunspot will last 50,000 hours, allowing pilots to fly with the light on at all times for enhanced visibility. The light also comes with “wig-wag” or pulsing capability and is so bright that it can be seen at great distances in daylight when the aircraft is not visible.

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The Pylon Place - June 2012

Planes of Fame Airshow Does It Again

By Marilyn Dash

The Planes of Fame Museum held their annual airshow the first weekend in May 2012. This year’s theme was “1942 – Turning the Tide” celebrating the 70th anniversary of our entry and participation in World War II. This is clearly one of the finest airshows in the US. And this year was no exception.

The regular aerobatic acts including Hartley Folstad and Margie Stivers in their Silver Wings Wingwalking performance started the day off with a beautiful “ballet in the sky.” Long time Chino regular, Tumbling Bear followed with his high-energy aerobatic routine in the Zlin. Clay Lacy returned again this year with his Learjet routine which is always fun to watch.

New features this year included fan favorite and award winning performer Sean D. Tucker, who brought his amazing Oracle Challenger III Biplane to wow the crowds. His aerial high-jinx included his signature double hammerhead, centrifuge, helicopter pass and the series of three ribbon cuts, all in different configurations – right knife edge, left knife edge and inverted.

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General Aviation in China Growing

By Alan Smith

The 2010 General Aviation Forum held in Beijing.When looking at change and economic growth in China, one first has to understand what kind of nation one is looking at. Start with the sheer size of China – in fifty years, its population has increased from a bit more than 500 million to more than one billion 328 million people. This has occurred despite government laws prohibiting marriage before the age of 29 and then limiting the number of children brought into the new family to one. As one can easily figure out, those regulations were almost impossible to enforce.

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NTSB Provides Investigative Update and Issues Recommendations to Increase Safety at Air Races

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) provided an investigative update on April 10, 2012, on last year’s crash of a highly modified P-51D airplane at the National Championship Air Races in Reno, Nev. On Sept. 16, 2011, the pilot of the Galloping Ghost experienced an upset while turning between pylons 8 and 9 on the racecourse. The airplane crashed on the ramp in the box seat spectator area. The pilot and 10 spectators were killed and more than 60 others were injured.

In addition to the investigative update, NTSB Chairman Deborah A.P. Hersman announced that the agency was issuing a total of seven safety recommendations to make the National Championship Air Races a safer event for pilots and spectators alike.

“We are not here to put a stop to air racing,” said Chairman Hersman. “We are here to make it safer.”

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