And Then There Was One
Ten airplanes that are the last still flying.
- By Stephen Joiner
- Air & Space magazine, March 2007
(Page 3 of 3)
“The first of the first,” Cliff Spink, who flies the last one, calls it. America’s founding fighter jet, the 1948 A-series Sabre, debuted the swept wing, set a world speed record, then broke the grip of MiG air superiority in the Korean War. Later, more refined variants would feature fully power-assisted controls and a more advanced tail design, but the 554 A-model aircraft occupy a distinct niche: Jet-propelled combat was never so no-frills or hands-on again. Only no. 178, now designated G-SABR, still flies. Restored by former P-51 Mustang pilot Ben Hall in 1971, it was acquired by Golden Apple Trust in the United Kingdom in 1990. “You instantly sense that the airplane is a thoroughbred,” says Spink. G-SABR is a Yankee star at European airshows, and Spink, a retired RAF air marshal, wants its airworthiness to endure for posterity. “It’s not ours,” he says. “None of these aircraft are. They belong to the future.”
Boeing B-29 Superfortress
The enormous wings of N529B were shading a China Lake, California boneyard when Commemorative Air Force member Victor Agather learned of the bomber’s existence in 1971. Agather had been looking for a B-29 to restore, and he was thrilled when fellow CAF member and commercial pilot Roger Baker spotted the B-29 during an overflight. Agather financed a four-year CAF restoration of the aircraft, and the restoration team christened the bomber Fifi after his wife. To underwrite its 400-gallon-per-hour fuel appetite, he proposed an unorthodox solution: public tours. “Nobody was doing that in 1975,” says Agather’s son Neils. The only Superfortress flying has paid its way ever since by thrilling thousands at airshows around the country. “People come and say, ‘My grandfather flew one in the war. Can I sit where he sat?’ ” says Neils. After 30 summers, the four 2,200-horsepower engines are marginal, and continued airworthiness depends on a CAF fundraising drive for new powerplants. Fortunately, Texas industrialist Joe Jamison has stepped forward with $2 million, and Neils is confident more of Fifi's fans will pitch in: “Anyone will tell you, she’s the queen of the fleet.”
Gloster Gauntlet
When skeptics ask if the 70-year-old biplane is really airworthy, Jyrki Laukkanen replies, “It was this morning when I flew it here.” Last of the open-cockpit British fighters, Gloster Gauntlets entered service with the Royal Air Force in 1936. After the Soviet Union invaded Finland in 1939, 25 Gauntlets were shipped through Sweden to bolster Finnish defenses. In 1976, members of the Finnish Air Force Technical Guild followed rumors of an abandoned warbird to a farm in Juupajoki, a municipality in western Finland. They found a Gauntlet in pieces—“hardly identifiable as an airplane,” says Laukkanen. After an 11,000-man-hour restoration, OH-XGT, painted in the wartime markings of the Finnish air force (including swastika-like symbols, which at the time signified good luck in Finnish culture), became a photo-op favorite on the Finnish airshow circuit. Retired FAF fighter pilot Laukkanen has flown the somewhat finicky Gauntlet every summer for 20 years. “Flying it requires continuous attention,” says Laukkanen, who has 1,300 hours in MiG-21s. “It keeps an old test pilot in sharp condition.”
Percival Mew Gull
Tony Smith speaks of the Real Aeroplane Company’s tiny, cream-colored monoplane as legend. “It’s the Holy Grail of British air racing,” says Smith, RAC’s chief pilot and the only one entrusted to fly the racer. The Percival Aircraft Corporation produced a half-dozen Mew Gulls in its Gravesend, England factory in 1934, and the aircraft went on to dominate the field. The first civilian aircraft to exceed 200 mph, G-AEXF captured the King’s Cup in 1938. Mew Gulls were prone to mishap, and only G-AEXF defied the actuarial tables by undergoing numerous rebuilds. The Real Aeroplane Company keeps the Mew Gull with the rest of its collection at Breighton Aerodrome in northern England. “The perfect harmony of the controls is just like a Spitfire,” says Smith, who flies the Mew Gull at a speed of 290 mph. With its recessed cockpit providing virtually zero forward visibility, “landings and takeoffs,” says Smith, “are a bit of a happening.”





Comments (1)
I would like to speak with author, Stephen Joiner, about the MYT Engine by Rafael Morgado and the transition from ground-based vehicles to airborne vehicles brought about by this 25 lb. engine, which develops over 100 h.p.
One of Morgado's partners is Dr. Jin Kim. I've spoken to him several times about his financing need of $125 million to launch this product which gets over 150 miles to the gallon and has enormous power-weight ratio
Larry Wingo
Posted by Larry Wingo on September 18,2008 | 12:44 AM