Sunday, July 22, 2012
Monday, July 16, 2012
BIGGEST, BADDEST 2012…sees Chuckie Fly over HAMILTON…
…and although their won't be any NHL teams in Hamilton, anytime soon, at least the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum keeps the city entertained!
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Never Was An Arrow II
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Labels: B-17 Flying Fortress, Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum, CWH, USAF, WW II
Thursday, September 4, 2008
The Way We Were ::: 1960 ::: CANADA
The AVROCAR…Canada's Flying Saucer - the World's Only, Ever…
In 1953, US military officials visited AVRO Canada to view Canada’s new fighter-jet, the CF-100 Canuck.
“Jack” Frost, known formerly outside of AVRO Canada as John Frost, Chief Designer of the de Havilland Hornet (basically, a better Mosquito), and Swallow project, who had also worked on the famed Vampire, and had been working on “stuff” at Avro Canada since 1947 wanted to share his SPG work with the visiting USAF and defense “delegation”.
These US defense staff had only come up to see Canada’s newest fighter, but they walked away seeing a hellva’ lot more.
Frost took them over to the Schaeffer Building where the Special Projects Group of AVRO Canada was located.
Here security guards, numerous locked doors, and special pass cards were a way of life. And here the unsuspecting delegates were introduced to Project Y.
Project Y was a wooden mock-up of a flying saucer capable of flying 1,500 mph and climbing vertically.
VTOL (Vertical Take-off and Landing)!
The Americans were astounded.
Still, they musta' reasoned, the Canadians had accomplished a lot in recent years…Avro Canada had already produced North America’s first jetliner (five years before America’s first, the Boeing’s 707), they had just seen the brand new Canadian jet fighter, and now here, right before their eyes was Canada’s ultra-secretive Project Y.
It was all too much.
But wait Frost continued…there’s more!
So the now, the very interested Americans, were introduced to the Y-2 Project and the Avrocar venture as well.
Again, it was all too much.
But Frost’s gamble paid off…and out came the USAF (and later the US Army's) chequebook. "Jack" had shown the USAF, secret drawings and items, other Avro Canada executive, then in attendance, didn't even know about!
The USAF was so interested in these projects, they later took over all the funding of AVRO Canada’s Special Project Group, and consequently the Y Projects.
So, in February of 1959 when the Arrow related projects (the Avro Arrow I and II and the Orenda Iroquois engine) were cancelled, and all 13,000 AVRO Canada employees were terminated and thrown out of work, Avro’s Special Project Group soldiered on, alone. There the SPG worked now, in those big empty buildings, where the Arrow and the Iroquois were now only a whisper, until March of 1961 when their US funding was finally exhausted.
The USAF formally cancelled the Avrocar and the WS-606A Supersonic VTOL programs, as they were officially known in December 1961.
ABOVE, the Avrocar flies at YYZ, Malton Regional Airport then, sometime in 1960.
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Never Was An Arrow II
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Labels: 1953, 1960, A. V. Roe Canada Ltd., Avrocar, Flying Saucer, John Frost, Malton, Toronto, USAF, WS-606A Supersonic VTOL Programmes, YYZ
Tuesday, October 9, 2007
:: The NEW Chapter .::..

…in America's Advanced Tactical Fighter (ATF) program… the Raptor!
You MIGHT be TOO CLOSE…when you're the same distance from the lampost… as the photographer!
The 5th generation of STEALH TECHNOLOGY has arrived, high above the skies of dormant Toronto!!
At $137.5 million USD each these "babies" are pricy but man can they fly! RAPTORS use thrust vectoring nozzle technology for incredible manoeurability, jamming technology to prevent counter-attack weapon "lock-ons" and strike their targets "sight" unseen.
The Congress of the United States has decided that the Raptor will never be sold internationally, to anybody, so Canada will never have any.
BUT WE WILL have some of these, which Canada is currently co-developing with the USA and several other Allied nations… the Joint Strike Fighter, the F-35.
Didya Know?
In the 2007 movie the Transformers, the Decepticon known as Starscream is an F-22.
In April of 2006, an F-22 pilot became trapped in his aircraft due to the canopy getting stuck. When all else failed he had to be cut out by fire department personnel.
The canopy was replaced.
…… and the cost?
A cool $182,205 USD, folks!
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Never Was An Arrow II
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6:56 AM
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Labels: CIAS, F-22, Paul Cardin, USAF, YYZ
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Salute! The IRREPRESSIBLE P-51!!
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Never Was An Arrow II
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4:11 PM
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Labels: FlyFest 2007, Mustang, P-51, USAF


