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This is the 66 GT350 of Airplanes

Started by eric lipper, February 05, 2020, 09:01:55 PM

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1967 eight barrel

This is a beautiful aircraft. I was a volunteer at Chino Air Museum for years while Ed. Maloney was running it. I flew under Steve Hinton.
This is one of the two P-38s the museum restored.
                                                                              -Keith

CSX 4133


I would have thought the P-51 Mustang would be the logical choice for the 66 GT350 of airplanes.

1967 eight barrel

Quote from: CSX 4133 on February 07, 2020, 03:59:50 PM

I would have thought the P-51 Mustang would be the logical choice for the 66 GT350 of airplanes.

From a performance standpoint, I would have to agree. The P-38 is faster.

1967 eight barrel

#18
I was flying the Mad Dog AKA Super 80 until they were retired in September of last year.  Compared to the 738 I'm crewing, they are antiquated. They are a workhorse that flies exceedingly well and loved by the crews assigned them.
                                                                                                       -Keith

acman63

Quote from: 1967 eight barrel on February 07, 2020, 03:17:24 PM
This is a beautiful aircraft. I was a volunteer at Chino Air Museum for years while Ed. Maloney was running it. I flew under Steve Hinton.
This is one of the two P-38s the museum restored.
                                                                              -Keith


My uncle flew C47s in WW2   (Hump Pilot)  when the returned to Green Bay he became a flight instructor at the local airport and had a P38.  My Mom wouldnt let me ride with him in it nor would she lt me ride in the P51 he traded the P38 for a few years later.  The noise those things make flying at low level is amazing
SAAC Concours Chairman

Owner Shelby Parts and Restoration Since 1977

SAAC original first year member

JD

^^^^ ah moms never let you have any real fun - seriously too bad!

Keith just rotated the one image...

'67 Shelby Headlight Bucket Grommets https://www.saacforum.com/index.php?topic=254.0
'67 Shelby Lower Grille Edge Protective Strip https://www.saacforum.com/index.php?topic=1237.0

acman63

Quote from: JD on February 07, 2020, 06:16:11 PM
^^^^ ah moms never let you have any real fun - seriously too bad!

Keith just rotated the one image...


Yep. only got to go in his later cessna
SAAC Concours Chairman

Owner Shelby Parts and Restoration Since 1977

SAAC original first year member

1967 eight barrel

#22
Jim:  The Allison V12 running in tandem is very distinct. Just like the Merlin powered Mustangs.  A low approach with wide-open throttle raises the hair on the back of my neck every time I hear it.
The P-38 was unique for its time. It has a control collum similar to the MD 80 I posted. It had a steering wheel instead of a stick. It also has roll down windows on each side over the wing. 
A lot of airmen lost their lives flying the hump. C46, C,47 and B24s made that run. 
When I started working land navigation in the military we didn't have GPS. We used a lensatic compass, a template for MGRS and the stars. Finding your way by the stars is a lost art with most who served post the early 90's. The PLGR was just coming on line when I exited in service in '90.
                                                                                       -Keith

eric lipper

This is one of my other old beech products.  Spent 6 years on a trailer behind my shop.  Went to Oshkosh three years ago and got a grand champion.  Nothing like an E-225-8 to take your stress away.
1947 Beech Staggerwing
1955 Beech Bonanza
1963 Vette Split Window
1965 Jag Conv
1966 GT350
1967 GT500
1968 GT500KR Conv
1969 Boss 429
1969 GT500 Conv
1978 King Cobra
1984 Aerostar 700P
2001 King Air F90GT
2002 Enzo
2005 Ford GT
2005 NSX

Chris Thauberger

I hadn't realized there were so many aircraft enthusiasts here on the forum.

My new project is restoring a Piper PA-12.

Right now its a sea can full of parts and a blueprint
Life is 1% what happen to you and 99% how you react to it.



Video: Gold Concours GT500
Article: Pursuit of Gold

1967 eight barrel

Where's the Continental at?  That aircraft has been in production since the late 40's. Hard to believe.

                                                                      -Keith

1967 eight barrel

Chris: I learned to fly in a Piper PA-28.  I miss the ease of small aircraft.  Much different from a 73-800.
                                                                           -Keith

eric lipper

Quote from: 1967 eight barrel on February 07, 2020, 11:23:45 PM
Where's the Continental at?  That aircraft has been in production since the late 40's. Hard to believe.

                                                                      -Keith

Here she is.
1947 Beech Staggerwing
1955 Beech Bonanza
1963 Vette Split Window
1965 Jag Conv
1966 GT350
1967 GT500
1968 GT500KR Conv
1969 Boss 429
1969 GT500 Conv
1978 King Cobra
1984 Aerostar 700P
2001 King Air F90GT
2002 Enzo
2005 Ford GT
2005 NSX

eric lipper

This is my favorite bird.  1984 Aerostar 700P which was a one year only version.  25 made.  At least three have been destroyed so its a pretty rare bird.  Nothing better than a piston plane that trues at 270 knots at FL 250.
1947 Beech Staggerwing
1955 Beech Bonanza
1963 Vette Split Window
1965 Jag Conv
1966 GT350
1967 GT500
1968 GT500KR Conv
1969 Boss 429
1969 GT500 Conv
1978 King Cobra
1984 Aerostar 700P
2001 King Air F90GT
2002 Enzo
2005 Ford GT
2005 NSX

1967 eight barrel

The 700P is an outstanding twin. I have flown the 601P a couple of times.  350 HP Lycoming sixes were responsive and the aircraft has incredible rudder authority.
I wouldn't mind a few hours on a 701P.  I have only seen a few of them over the years. They are relatively rare.

                                                                                                  -Keith