Have you ever flown in any rare or special aircraft?
Well, at the time, there were perhaps three carriers flying the 747-SPs (Qantas, South African and Iran Air). I think that only Iran Air flies them now. When I flew the -SP, it was at the end of its run with South African Airwys (SA).SN30952 wrote:Me too, but why is that a rare or special aircraft, Kerwin?eskyguide wrote:Well, I flew in SA's Boeing 747-SP ... Kerwin.
That's more than 10 years ago, Daniel, Andre....
Ya, that one, Daniel. The aircraft manufactured by Générale Aéronautique Marcel Dassault .danieln wrote:I once had the luck to fly with a Dassault Mercure on a flight of Air Inter...!
Everybody seemed to forget that one.
What happened to these aircraft? Where are they?
Air Inter opted for the French jetliner on 30 January 1972, placing a firm order for 10 units to be delivered from 1973 onwards. The Mercure looked rather good on paper, with lower operating cost and breakeven load factor than those of its competitors.
The Mercure had a Head up Display (HUD), and an "all-weather-landing system*" what ment operations would not be disrupted with Cat. III weather conditions.
And indeed the French Republic was pushing Dassault to have a second path in case the Concorde and Airbus programs would fail, but remember the joke about the Mercure: its limited range would never allow it the leave France….
The last revenue flight of a Mercure was operated by F-BTTB on 29 April 1995.
*Dassault was building miltary aviation equipment, don't forget.
I started flying for the navy as a student in the SNJ's, and flew a few rare birds.
I suckered into ferrying a "CUTLASS" hangar queen from NAS Brooklyn to Anacostia once back in 1957, in a reserve COUGAR Squaron.
I flew the Martin 202/404 for dearold TWA in 1957. They were called The Greyhound of the Ohio Valley.
I also flew the CV-880 in 1967. That was one nice machine. Hot over the fence, but good brakes.
Once I flew a Curtis Pusher 2/3 replica that was for sale. At the time I had been flying the L-1011, so I had a little trouble landing - kept flaring at 20' or so.
God be with the days!

I suckered into ferrying a "CUTLASS" hangar queen from NAS Brooklyn to Anacostia once back in 1957, in a reserve COUGAR Squaron.
I flew the Martin 202/404 for dearold TWA in 1957. They were called The Greyhound of the Ohio Valley.
I also flew the CV-880 in 1967. That was one nice machine. Hot over the fence, but good brakes.
Once I flew a Curtis Pusher 2/3 replica that was for sale. At the time I had been flying the L-1011, so I had a little trouble landing - kept flaring at 20' or so.
God be with the days!
In october 2003 during a brief stay in Venezuela I managed to take ride on a venerable DC3; "The lady" was a C 47 of a company called "El Sol de America" (YV911C C/N 32761) and was used on a daily run between Caracas and Los Roques Islands (45min of flight); it was in impeccable condition sporting ex AZ seatbelt!!!
I think the service is still operated (with DC3); for anyone who is interested, the tickets can be purchased at the airline's office in CCS airport
I think the service is still operated (with DC3); for anyone who is interested, the tickets can be purchased at the airline's office in CCS airport
I was a PAX on a Martin Mars back in 1955. Flew from NAS Alameda to Pearl Harbor. Very comfortable seat, nice, slow ride.
I had temp. orders to FAWTUPAC, Fleet All Weather Training Unit, Pacific, supposedly to update my instrument proficiency. I reported to NAS MOFFETT, VF-152 which was an All Weather and Night Intercept Squadron, flying the F2H-3 Banshee.
My CO intervened to try to get me out of this, because I should have been ordered to temp. duty at FAWTUPAC, "DET A", right there in Hangar One with the rest of the squadron.
No dice, so off I went to Pearl. I reported to a skeleton administrative squadron, and they explained the orders were missprinted, should have added "DET A". "No kidding", said I. "Where's the O'Club." I was a smartawrse Lt(jg) at the time.
Orders came thru after a few days back to Alameda on a Mars.
Hey, when they hand you lemons, make lemonade, right? Put some Vodka in it too, please. 8)
I had temp. orders to FAWTUPAC, Fleet All Weather Training Unit, Pacific, supposedly to update my instrument proficiency. I reported to NAS MOFFETT, VF-152 which was an All Weather and Night Intercept Squadron, flying the F2H-3 Banshee.
My CO intervened to try to get me out of this, because I should have been ordered to temp. duty at FAWTUPAC, "DET A", right there in Hangar One with the rest of the squadron.
No dice, so off I went to Pearl. I reported to a skeleton administrative squadron, and they explained the orders were missprinted, should have added "DET A". "No kidding", said I. "Where's the O'Club." I was a smartawrse Lt(jg) at the time.
Orders came thru after a few days back to Alameda on a Mars.
Hey, when they hand you lemons, make lemonade, right? Put some Vodka in it too, please. 8)
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bigjulie
-
BelgianBoy
- Posts: 75
- Joined: 11 Apr 2005, 00:00
Rare plane
I flew in the prototype of the civilian C-130
- fokker_f27
- Posts: 1812
- Joined: 19 Nov 2005, 00:00
- Location: Weerde, Zemst - Belgium
Aircraft that do not fly anymore:
KLM Boeing 747-206B/M(SUD)
Continental Express ATR42-500
Historical aircraft:
Lufthansa Junkers Ju 52/3M
We often flow the old KLM 747 Classic over the atlantic, and managed to get a visit to the cockpit. The entertainment on those birds was terrible, but I didn't know about PTVs back then, so I didn't mind. The ride was always followed on a Continental Express ATR 42. They are now scrapped or in service with Continental Connection.
And for the Junkers, just look fo the trip report in the aviation experience forum.
And someone with good and bad luck at the same time: Bob. He made his first flight in EI-CJE, but the aircraft had sucked up a pebble on takeoff, so they had to return to the airport.
KLM Boeing 747-206B/M(SUD)
Continental Express ATR42-500
Historical aircraft:
Lufthansa Junkers Ju 52/3M
We often flow the old KLM 747 Classic over the atlantic, and managed to get a visit to the cockpit. The entertainment on those birds was terrible, but I didn't know about PTVs back then, so I didn't mind. The ride was always followed on a Continental Express ATR 42. They are now scrapped or in service with Continental Connection.
And for the Junkers, just look fo the trip report in the aviation experience forum.
And someone with good and bad luck at the same time: Bob. He made his first flight in EI-CJE, but the aircraft had sucked up a pebble on takeoff, so they had to return to the airport.
Last edited by fokker_f27 on 16 Aug 2006, 12:08, edited 1 time in total.
The most sexy girl in the sky: The Sud-Est Caravelle 12.
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Orange_Jumper
- Posts: 11
- Joined: 12 Aug 2006, 17:31
- Location: Beek, Limburg, Euregio ( EHBK/MST)
- Contact: