AT-6 Texan

/ AT-6 Texan #1  

jimmoore

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Augusta, AR
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My son took me to the North Little Rock airport yesterday and I got a ride on his friends AT-6 Texan. We also saw a B-17, B-24 and B-25 Bombers on display.
 

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/ AT-6 Texan #2  
Very cool!

We saw the B-17, B-24, and B-25 here at our local airport back in October, they are truly amazing machines, as were the men that served on them.
 
/ AT-6 Texan #3  
jimmoore said:
My son took me to the North Little Rock airport yesterday and I got a ride on his friends AT-6 Texan. We also saw a B-17, B-24 and B-25 Bombers on display.

Well that's just cool that you got a ride! Nice pics too.
 
/ AT-6 Texan #5  
Neat! :D

Back in the mid 80's I worked at the local airport. Some guys went over to Africa and bought a half a dozen T6's and a few DC3s and brought them back to refurb and sell to well-off type folks. ;) Neat airplanes.
 
/ AT-6 Texan #6  
Great pictures...thanks for posting them!

Always did love those old birds from WW II.
 
/ AT-6 Texan #7  
Jim, The AT-6 is one heck of a ride isn't it?!
If they come around again, try the B-17 & B-24, they are a real thrill!
 

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/ AT-6 Texan #8  
Jim,

Very nice pictures and nothing quite like the sounds of those radial engines. I just finished a book by Stephen Ambrose on George McGovern's experiences flying a B-24 in Europe at the end of WW II. It was very interesting and describes the B-24 as requiring constant, rugged, brute power to keep flying, but would also withstand great punishment. The book is worth a read if you get a chance. Dyer, retired
 
/ AT-6 Texan #10  
I am far too young to remember those times, but warbirds have always been my favorites. I have taken a tour of a b-17 on the ground, and went to the Glaciar Girl museum before it closed.
A few years ago, my wife and I were in Germany for our anniversary. We were in the Alps looking at the castles when I heard the deep, low, slow moving groan that only a few planes make. There wasn't enough time to snap a photo, but, two Iron Annies (the Fokker trimotor) went flying overhead.:cool:
Can you imagine....tooling along, through the alps, in a plane like that.
 
/ AT-6 Texan #11  
I'm too young to remember too... Growing up I never knew the nice Old Guy down the street was a WWII Fighter Ace flying a Hellcat in the Pacific.

It wasn't until I saw a story on PBS that I found out that he had shot down 5 Japanese planes in one day and the only pilot to launch off his carrier 3 different ways... he was credited with saving the carrier that day...

He launched the regular way, off the fan tail when the deck was on fire and sideways from the hanger deck when the ship was burning... He positioned his plane sideways, had the crew grab on to hold the plane back as he applied power and then launched, hit the crest of a wave and gained altitude and the rest is history...

I asked him why he never talked about his days in the Navy with us kids and he said that he just wanted us kids to be kids...
 
/ AT-6 Texan #12  
Inside the nose of a B17. The "rock" sticking up over my fathers left shoulder in the background is Pilot Mountain, AKA Mount Pilot on the Andy Griffith show :)

Since my dad spend over 25 years in the Air Force, he really enjoyed that flight.

b17inside4.jpg
 
/ AT-6 Texan #14  
I think anyone with the ability and interest should look into one of the groups that travel the states and offer rides. It is something I'll never forget and you will gain appreciation for the men that flew them in harms way.
 
/ AT-6 Texan #15  
The group that was at our local airport was The Collings Foundation witch I think is the same group that has the planes jimmoore posted pictures of. The rides were $350 to $400 for 30 minute rides, while definatly a good cause, it was just to rich for me...
 
/ AT-6 Texan #16  
I was just a few years too young for WWII but I did serve as a Civil Air Patrol aircraft spotter along the gulf coast. I quickly learned to recognize our aircraft ( working from shilouette models) and some of the foreign planes. Those old USAF planes were something else. My favorite was the B-25 and I could recognize it from sound alone it was so distinctive.

Vernon
 
/ AT-6 Texan #17  
texbaylea said:
I was just a few years too young for WWII but I did serve as a Civil Air Patrol aircraft spotter along the gulf coast. I quickly learned to recognize our aircraft ( working from shilouette models) and some of the foreign planes. Those old USAF planes were something else. My favorite was the B-25 and I could recognize it from sound alone it was so distinctive.

Vernon

Vernon,

I agree, the radial engines sounded to me like a pack of Harley's heading off down the runway....beefy sounding. he plane was not as big as I would have thought either. In Maine we have a place called Cole's Transportation Museum in Owls Head near Rockland on the Coast. Every year they have an antique plane fly-in. We got my dad a ride in an old PT-17 Stearman, which is what he trained in prior to WW II ending. They always have a B-17 fly in. That was an impressive sight to see in flight. Some group, I think the Confederate Air Force, just flew a P-38 Lightening and a P-40 Warhawk into Presque Isle in Northern Maine on their way to Texas I think. They were found in Labrador (who knows how they came to be there) and were on their way back to be completely restored. Presque Isle in far Northern Maine used to be a jump off spot for planes being transported to the European theater in WW II. My dad had pictures of a lot of, mostly bombers, woman pilots doing the ferrying across.

It's supposed to be mid 40's here tomorrow and then start snowing, sleeting, raining, the works tomorrow night into Saturday. I may get a little more snow removal done before the end of this season, but it will end eventually....I hope! Take care. John, retired
 
/ AT-6 Texan #18  
Dyer said:
Vernon,

I agree, the radial engines sounded to me like a pack of Harley's heading off down the runway....beefy sounding.

We are near Quantico base and one summer evening they flew over us B-17 (I believe) and Liberator from some air show or such. It was still low and coming slowly like an unstopable doom. Quite an experience and hard to imagine those 100s and 1000s of bombers over Germany.
 
/ AT-6 Texan
  • Thread Starter
#19  
kennyd, here is the hand bill .
 
/ AT-6 Texan
  • Thread Starter
#20  
GOT IT TO UPLOAD THIS TIME
 

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