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  • admin 3:50 pm on August 17, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    Aerographs Product of the Week – Cessna 195 “BusinessLiner” 

    The Cessna 190 and 195 Businessliner are a family of light single radial engine powered, conventional landing gear equipped, general aviation aircraft which were manufactured by Cessna between 1947 and 1954.

    http://store.aerographs.com/products/Cessna-195-Rudder-.html

    The 195 model was also used by the United States Air Force, Air National Guard and Army as a light transport and utility aircraft under the designation LC-126.

    The Cessna 190 and 195 were Cessna’s only postwar radial-engined aircraft. The first prototype flew in 1945, after the end of World War II and both the 190 and 195 entered production in 1947.

    The 195 was the first Cessna airplane to be completely constructed of aluminum and features a cantilever wing, similar to the pre-war Cessna 165 from which it is derived. The wing planform differs from later Cessna light aircraft in that it has a straight taper from root chord to tip chord and no dihedral. The airfoil employed is a NACA 2412, the same as used on the later Cessna 150, 172 and 182.

    The 190/195 fuselages were large in comparison to other Cessna models because the 42″ diameter radial engine had to be accommodated upfront. The crew and passengers were accommodated on individual seats in the first row with comfortable space between seats with up to three passengers on a bench seat in the second row.

    The 190/195 has flat sprung-steel landing gear. Many have been equipped with swiveling cross-wind landing gear which allows landing with up to 15 degrees of crab. While the crosswind gear simplifies landings it makes the aircraft difficult to ground handle. The 195 is equipped with a retractable step that extends when the cabin door is opened, although some have been modified to make the step a fixed unit.

    The aircraft was expensive to purchase and operate for private use and Cessna therefore marketed them as mainly as a business aircraft under the name “Businessliner”.

    The engines fitted to the 190 and 195 became well-known for their oil consumption. The aircraft has a 5 gallon oil tank, with 2 gallons the minimum for flight. Typical oil consumption with steel cylinder barrels is two quarts per hour.

    A factory-produced floatplane version was equipped with a triple tail for improved lateral stability. The tail resembles that of the Lockheed Constellation.

    The Cessna 195 produces a cruise true airspeed of 148 knots (170 mph, 275 km/h) on a fuel consumption of 16 US gallons per hour. It can accommodate 5 people.

    Including the LC-126s, a total of 1180 190s and 195s were built.

    The 190 was originally introduced at a price of USD $12,750 in 1947. When production ended the price had risen to USD $24,700 for the 195B. This compared to USD$3,495 for the Cessna 140 two seater of the same period.

    Using several prints from a particularly distinctive aircraft is a great way to establish the a theme for your decor.

    Each image is available in many sizes to fit any budget and any size space. The 195 Rudder Detail is also available as a T-Shirt!

     
  • Paula Williams 3:15 pm on August 13, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    July Winner Selects Ford Tri-Motor Rudder 

    Ford Tri-Motor Rudder

    Our drawing winner, Jim Way sent this note:

    Your photos are great. So many quality images makes it difficult to make a selection.

    However, I think I’ve settled on the Ford Tri-Motor Rudder black-and-white.  I’m a fan of the more abstract images and this one looks great.

    Thanks Jim, and we’re glad someone with a good eye won the drawing!  Good luck to those entering in August!

     
  • Paula Williams 7:18 pm on August 9, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    Aerographs Product of the Week – Ryan ST Color Prints 

    Fully restored, nearly 70 years old, and absolutely beautiful.  Available in prints, coasters and T shirts

    From Wikipedia-

    The Ryan STs were a series of two seat, low wing monoplane aircraft built by the Ryan Aeronautical Company. They were used as sport aircraft, as well as trainers by flying schools and the military of several countries.

    Ryan ST

    Ryan ST braces

    Ryan ST

    Design and development

    T. Claude Ryan was the founder of the Ryan Aeronautical Company, the second incarnation of a company with this name, and the fourth company with which he had been involved to bear his name[1] (the first, Ryan Airlines, was the manufacturer of the Ryan NYP, more famously known as the Spirit of St. Louis). He began the development of the ST (for “Sport Trainer”, and also known as S-T), the first design of the company, in 1933.[2]

    The ST featured two open cockpits in tandem in a metal semi-monocoque fuselage of two main frames – one steel, the other half of steel and half of aluminium alloy (alclad) – to take the loads from the wing spars and six more alclad frames; and alclad skin.[3] It had wings in three sections of hybrid construction; the centre section integral with the fuselage had tubular steel spars, the front spar a simple tube with an external brace to the upper fuselage, and the rear spar in the form of a parallel chord truss.[3] The two outer wing panels had wooden spars and alclad ribs, with diagonal rods bracing the wings internally. Alclad sheet was used to form the leading edges, and fabric covered the whole structure. When attached the outer wings were braced with flying wires to the fixed conventional landing gear and landing wires to the upper fuselage.[3]

    Five STs were built[4] before the follow-on ST-A (also S-T-A) (A for Aerobatic) was developed with a more powerful engine. A single ST-B was produced, this being an ST-A with only one seat and an extra fuel tank where the front cockpit normally was; this aircraft was subsequently converted back to ST-A standard.[5] The ST-A was further developed as the ST-A Special, with an engine of increased power.

    In 1937 the ST-A Special was developed into a military version, the STM (also ST-M) series. Changes included wider cockpits to enable military pilots to enter and exit while wearing parachutes, and provision for a machine gun on some examples[4]. Variants in the series included the STM-2P single-seat version armed with a machine gun delivered to Nationalist China; and the STM-S2, which could be fitted with landing gear or with EDO Model 1965 floats.[3][6]
    A U.S. Navy Ryan NR-1 at NAS Jacksonville, 1942.

    After the ST-M came the ST-3, a substantial redesign in 1941 partly brought about by the unreliability of the Menasco engines fitted to STs to that point. The United States Army Air Corps (USAAC) had purchased several dozen ST-M variants under various designations and had Ryan Aeronautical re-engine most with Kinner R-440 radial engines.[4][7] The USAAC found the modification to be beneficial and asked Ryan Aeronautical to design a variant with this engine as standard, and with airframe modifications considered desirable from in-service experience. The ST-3 that resulted featured a longer and more circular wider fuselage, this being suggested by the circular radial engine. Other changes included a revised rudder, balanced ailerons and elevators, and strengthened main landing gear with the legs spaced further apart. The streamlining spats covering the mainwheels, found on ST series aircraft to that point, were deleted as well.[1] The ST-3 served as the basis for military versions ordered by the USAAC and the United States Navy (USN).[4]

    The ST-3 gave rise to another model developed in 1941 and early 1942, this was the ST-3KR (for Kinner Radial). The ST-3KR had a more powerful Kinner R-5 engine fitted and became the definitive model; more than 1,000 military versions were built during World War II as PT-22 Recruits.[4] The final variant was the ST-4, which was a version of the ST-3 with a wooden fuselage, developed in case a shortage of “strategic materials” (i.e. of metal) developed. Such a shortage did not eventuate and the ST-4 was not put into mass-production.[4]

    The first Ryan ST flew for the first time on 8 June 1934[1] and production began the following year, when nine aircraft were delivered.[7] Except for 1937 (when 46 aircraft were built), production rates remained low for several years, at about one aircraft every two weeks. This changed in 1940 when deliveries to military forces began in earnest; production that year was just under three aircraft per week.[7] Total production of civil and military aircraft prior to the entry of the United States into World War II amounted to 315.[7][8] Another 1,253 military versions were produced in 1942 and 1943, for a total of 1,568 aircraft of all models.
    [edit] Operational history

    Most civil aircraft in the ST series were delivered in the United States, although a few were exported to South Africa, Australia and various countries in Latin America. An example of the ST-A was procured by the USAAC in 1939 for evaluation as the XPT-16. This was followed by 15 YPT-16s, the first time the USAAC had ordered a monoplane trainer. These were the first of more than 1,000 Ryan STs to serve the USAAC, its successor the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) and the USN.[9][10]

    A large number of STMs were exported in the 1930s and early 1940s (prior to the entry of the United States into World War Two) to various Air forces, with the biggest customer being the military of the Netherlands East Indies (NEI, now Indonesia). The NEI Army and Navy took delivery of 84 STM-2s and 24 STM-S2s in 1940 and early 1941.[1][7][8][11] Another 50 STM-2Es and STM-2Ps were exported to Nationalist China, while others were exported to Bolivia, Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico and Nicaragua.[4]

    After the Japanese invasion of the NEI many Ryans in that country were pressed into combat, especially in reconnaissance roles, and large numbers were shot down or destroyed on the ground.[12] Surviving STM-2s and STM-S2s that were not captured by the Japanese were shipped to Australia, where 34 entered service in the Royal Australian Air Force as trainers. Many of those that survived until the end of World War Two were then placed on the civil register in Australia and elsewhere, and some are still flying almost 70 years after they were built.

    ST –     Prototype and first model, fitted with a Menasco B4 engine of 95 hp; five built.

    ST-A –     Improved ST designed for aerobatics, fitted with a Menasco C4 engine of 125 hp; 73 built.[15]

    ST-A Special –     Improved ST-A, fitted with a Menasco C4S engine of 150 hp; 10 built.[16]

    ST-B –     Single-seat variant of ST-A with extra fuel tank in place of front cockpit; one built, later converted to ST-A.

    STM –     Military version of ST-A Special with wider cockpits, some with provision for a machine gun; 22 built.

    STM-2 –     Variant of STM for Netherlands East Indies Army and Navy; 95 built.

    STM-2E –     Variant of STM delivered to China, fitted with a Menasco C4S2 engine of 165 hp; 48 built.

    STM-2P –     Single-seat variant of the STM-2E with provision for a machine gun, also delivered to China; 2 built.

    STM-S2 –     Variant of STM-2 with interchangeable wheel landing gear or floats for Netherlands East Indies Navy; 13 built.

    ST-W –     Experimental conversions, with a Warner Scarab radial engine; one converted from USAAC YPT-16 with Scarab of 125 hp; one converted from USAAC PT-20A with Super Scarab of 160 hp.[5][7]

    ST-3 –     Variant with new fuselage shape and a Kinner B-5 radial engine of 125 hp; one built.

    ST-3KR –     Variant of ST-3 with a Kinner R-5 radial engine of 160 hp, one built.

    ST-4 –     Variant of ST-3 manufactured with wooden fuselage; one built.

    General characteristics

    • Crew: one, pilot
    • Capacity: 1 passenger
    • Length: 21 ft 5 in (6.53 m)
    • Wingspan: 30 ft 0 in (9.15 m)
    • Height: 9 ft 2 in (2.79 m)
    • Wing area: 124 ft² (11.5 m²)
    • Empty weight: 1,081 lb (490 kg)
    • Loaded weight: 1,600 lb (726 kg)
    • Powerplant: 1× Menasco C4, 125 hp (93 kW)

    Performance

    • Maximum speed: 126 mph (203 km/h)
    • Range: 366 miles (589 km)
    • Service ceiling: 17,200 ft (5,243 m)
    • Rate of climb: 800 ft/min (244 m/min)
    • Wing loading: 13 lb/ft² (63 kg/m²)
    • Power/mass: 0.08 hp/lb (0.13 kW/kg)

    Using several prints from a particularly distinctive aircraft is a great way to establish the a theme for your decor.

    Each image is available in many sizes to fit any budget and any size space.

    Blue Skies!
    -Slemper

    P.S. Get these prints in a variety of sizes, but frame them identically to further the unified theme! Black mats make them particularly dramatic.

     
  • Paula Williams 10:49 pm on August 5, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    Contest Winner and Splosh-Kosh Update! 

    John Slemp has been busy. . .

    He’s been shooting great photos at the EAA AirVenture in OshKosh Wisconsin, (this year’s event was so rainy it’s unofficially called “Splosh-Kosh.”)

    He’s got great photos and great stories as soon as we can lock him up in a room with a computer long enough to write some posts for this blog . . .

    Aviation Photography at Splosh Kosh

    John Slemp (in red) after lying prone in the mud to get the perfect shot at Splosh Kosh

    Here’s a quick note from John

    Here we are “returning to base” after the first shoot last Tuesday morning.  Next to me is Eric Varndell, the Global Marketing Manager-Aviation Tires for Goodyear.  That’s mud and water all over me, as the shot required a prone position in a grassy (muddy/wet) area.  No worries though, as we got the shot . .  . Jeff Monter, the agency creative director is behind Eric (wearing an Aerographs hat!), and Mark (who prints and distributes the calendars) is seen over my shoulder, carrying the ladder.  All in all, it was a great week!  We went to breakfast right after this.

    Meanwhile, join us in congratulating Jim Way, who won a 24 x 24″ fine art print of the Douglas SBD-5 Wing & Speed Brakes.

    If you haven’t signed up for our newsletter, do it today and you’ll be entered for next month’s drawing for a 24 x 24 print of your choice!

     
  • Paula Williams 7:16 pm on August 2, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    Aerographs Product of the Week – Black and White Ford TriMotor Prints 

    The Ford Trimotor is a very distinctive piece of Americana, as well as aviation history

    From Wikipedia -

    • The Ford Trimotor (also variously identified as the “Tri-Motor”, and nicknamed “The Tin Goose”) was an American three engine civil transport aircraft first produced in 1925 by Henry Ford and continued in production until June 7, 1933. Throughout its lifespan a total of 199 aircraft were produced.Although designed for the civil market, the aircraft was also used by the military and was sold all over the world. Unlike his famous Ford Model T cars, trucks and farm tractors, Ford did not make the engines for these aircraft.

    Imagine your decorating your home or business with a few of these.  There are 15 images in the Trimotor collection, click here to see them all!

    Ford Trimotor Empennage
    Ford Trimotor Aileron

    Ford Trimotor Cowling

    Ford Trimotor Rudder

    Ford Trimotor Engine

    The story of the Ford Trimotor begins with William Bushnell Stout, an engineer who had previously designed several aircraft using principles similar to those of Professor Hugo Junkers, the famous German manufacturer.

    Stout, a bold and imaginative salesman, sent a mimeographed form letter to leading manufacturers, blithely asking for $1,000 and adding: “For your one thousand dollars you will get one definite promise: You will never get your money back.” Stout raised $20,000, including $1,000 each from Edsel and Henry Ford.

    In the early 1920s Henry Ford, along with a group of 19 other investors including his son Edsel, invested in the Stout Metal Airplane Company. In 1925, Ford bought Stout and its Hugo Junkers-influenced aircraft designs. Ford adapted the traditionally single engined Stout design with three Wright air-cooled radial engines. After a series of test aircraft and a suspicious fire causing the complete destruction of all previous designs, the 4-AT and 5-AT emerged. The Ford Trimotors used an all-metal construction — not a revolutionary concept, but certainly more advanced than the standard construction techniques in the 1920s. The aircraft resembled the Fokker F.VII but it was all metal allowing Ford to claim it was “the safest airliner around.” Its fuselage and wings were constructed of aluminum and corrugated for added strength although the drag reduced overall performance. This has become something of a trademark for the Trimotor. Transcontinental Air Transport, which later became part of Trans World Airlines, used the aircraft to begin its transcontinental air service from San Diego to New York in 1929.

    Although designed primarily for passenger use, the Trimotor could be easily adapted for cargo hauling as the seats in the fuselage could be removed. To increase capacity, one unusual feature was the provision of “drop down” cargo holds in the lower inner wing sections of the 5-AT variant.

    One 4-AT with Wright J-4 200 hp engines was built for the Army Air Corps as type C-3, and seven with Wright R-790-3 (235 hp) as type C-3A. The latter were upgraded to Wright R-975-1 (J6-9) radials at 300 hp and redesignated C-9. Five 5-ATs were built as C-4 or C-4A.

    The original (commercial production) 4-AT had three air cooled Wright radial engines. It carried a crew of three: pilot, co-pilot and stewardess as well as eight or nine passengers (up to 12 passengers could be accommodated in special configurations). The later 5-AT had more powerful Pratt & Whitney engines. All models had aluminum corrugated sheet metal body and wings. However, unlike many aircraft of this era, extending through World War II and later, the aircraft control surfaces were not fabric covered, but were of corrugated aluminum. As was common for the time, the rudder and elevator were controlled by wires that were strung along the external surface of the aircraft. Similarly, engine gauges were mounted externally, on the engines, to be read by the pilot looking through the windscreen. Another anachronism was the use of the hand-operated “Johnny Brake.”

    Like his cars and tractors, these Ford aircraft were well designed, relatively inexpensive, and reliable (for the era). The combination of metal structure and simple systems lead to a reputation for ruggedness. Rudimentary servicing could be accomplished “in the field” with ground crew able to work on engines using scaffolding and platforms. In order to fly into normally inaccessible sites, the Ford Trimotor could be fitted with skis and floats.

    The rapid development of aircraft at this time (the vastly superior Douglas DC-2 was first conceived in 1932), along with the death of his personal pilot, Harry Brooks, on a test flight led to Henry Ford losing interest in aviation. While Ford did not make a profit on its aircraft business, Ford’s reputation lent credibility to the infant aviation industry, and Ford helped introduce many aspects of the modern aviation infrastructure, including paved runways, passenger terminals, hangars, airmail, and radio navigation.

    In the late 1920s, the Ford Aircraft Division was reputedly the “largest manufacturer of commercial airplanes in the world.” Alongside the Ford Trimotor, a new one-passenger commuter aircraft, the Ford Flivver or “Sky Flivver” had been designed and flown in prototype form but never entered series production. The Trimotor was not to be Ford’s last venture in aircraft production. During World War II, he built the largest aircraft manufacturing plant in the world at the Willow Run, Michigan plant and assembled thousands of B-24 Liberator bombers under license from Consolidated Aircraft.

    Using several prints from a particularly distinctive aircraft is a great way to establish the a theme for your decor.

    Each image is available in many sizes to fit any budget and any size space.

    Blue Skies!
    -Slemper

    P.S. Get these prints in a variety of sizes, but frame them identically to further the unified theme! Black mats make them particularly dramatic.

     
  • Paula Williams 12:54 pm on July 26, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    Item of the Week – Youth T-Shirts for Back To School 

    Send your young aviator back to school in style.  Here are four ideas, there are lots more on the Aerographs web site.

    Vintage Aviation Sea Fury Youth T ShirtVintage Aviation Youth T-Shirt - Just Before the Boom

    Vintage Aviation Youth T Shirt - Douglas SBD

    Vintage Aviation Youth T-Shirt

     
  • Paula Williams 4:48 pm on July 23, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    Aerographs Understands Value – See Forbes Article 

    Aerographs was mentioned in the Wheels Up Business Aviation Blog on Forbes.com

    Aerographs was mentioned in the Wheels Up Business Aviation Blog on Forbes.com

    In Jeffrey J. Fox’s classic book “How to Become a Rainmaker,” Fox emphasizes the need to “show them the money” for each deal for each prospective client.

    To do this, you have to understand what the customer is actually buying.

    What the customer really values

    To use the example from the book,  let’s say you are in a paint store evaluating two brands of house paint. Brand A is $10 a gallon and Brand B is $18 a gallon. Brand A has the lowest price, but Brand B has more pigment, thereby requiring one less coat of paint than Brand A.  Which paint is the better value?

    If you want a gallon of paint, Brand A is the better value.  If you want a painted house, Brand B is the better value, assuming you would use half as much paint – even before you calculate time spent painting!

    A key activity of anyone in business is to figure out what the customer is really after, then offer him the best value for his dollar. This doesn’t necessarily equate to the cheapest product or the lowest fare.

    Most people don’t buy a product or service, they buy the means to meet their agenda.

    Very smart people in aviation companies (some of whom also happen to be ABCI clients) have done the hard work of figuring out what their customers really value.  It’s more than a difference of semantics –it’s a difference of mindset, and it seems that for the airlines, it’s gotten lost in the recent fray over price.

    Examples of value propositions from the aviation field

    • Aerographs’ clients don’t necessarily just want a  fine art print of a vintage aircraft. These clients want to enhance their office with an elegant feeling and a touch of class and nostalgia. These aviation attorneys, tax specialists, real estate agents and insurance folks know that an appropriate piece of art makes a connection with clients and other visitors to the office.

     
  • Paula Williams 11:21 pm on July 20, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    Aerographs Product of the Week – Aviation Coasters! 

    These coasters are as handsome as they are functional.  4 inches square, they have a cork backing, and absorb liquids like crazy.  Each set comes with an oak holder for storage.

    Select from  DC-3s, Douglas Tri-Moters, Wright Brothers, Lockheed 12A, Modern Military, P-51 Mustang, Ryan ST, Space Shuttle, Stinson Voyager, WWII Fighters.  Where else can you get this much class (and history!) for $30?
    Warbirds

    Wright Brothers

    Ryan ST

    Modern Military

     
  • John Slemp 10:22 pm on May 3, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    The Smithsonian Air & Space Magazine Website… 

    Hello Folks!
    Recently had an image posted to the “Snapshot” section of the Air & Space website.  It is a “portrait” of a yellow WACO, owned by Atlanta’s Steve Collins.  He owns Biplane Rides Over Atlanta, and uses it to introduce many to the joys of open cockpit flying.  The image below was shot a week later while doing some details of the same aircraft.

    WACO YMF-5C. Owned by Steve Collins of Atlanta. ©2010 John Slemp

    Thanks! to Steve for the opportunity to photograph this lovely aircraft…

    Blue Skies!

    John

     
  • John Slemp 1:55 pm on April 16, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    Touching History . . . 

    WWII Spanish Pilot Wings. © 2010 John Slemp

    As a fan of history, it is not often that one has the opportunity to “touch” history. And yet, I had the rare chance to do just that last week, when I photographed several WWII aviation artifacts in a private collection. They belong to my friend and P-51 Mustang fighter ace, Bob “Punchy” Powell. Having lived through the dark days of WWII, he has since amassed quite a collection of memorabilia, including several items I’d never seen before.

    WWII Nazi pilot wings.  After the war, the swastika was removed, per regulation.  © 2010 John Slemp

    WWII Nazi pilot wings. After the war, the swastika was removed, per regulation. © 2010 John Slemp

    One of the things that most struck me about the different items was how design “traits” of the various countries was evident in their military insignia. I found the German wings beautiful, but “showy” and a bit foreboding as well. I’m sure that was intentional…

    WWII Japanese Pilot Graduation Wings.  © 2010 John Slemp

    WWII Japanese Pilot Graduation Wings. © 2010 John Slemp

    I found the Japanese wings to be subtly beautiful, almost like a piece of jewelry. Apparently the training to become a Japanese pilot was very rigorous emotionally, physically, and militarily. The washout rate was high and if memory serves, it took over a year to complete the training, which did not work in their favor as losses escalated later in the war.

    "V Mail" letters that Punchy's mother kept.  © 2010 John Slemp

    "V Mail" letters that Punchy's mother kept. © 2010 John Slemp

    Punchy also introduced me to “V Mail”, which I had never heard of before. In an effort to keep the weight down, and therefore the logistical requirements to ship home letters from servicemen, V Mail was developed. Letters were written home on a standard sized sheet of paper, which was then reduced in size, using microfilm. Shipped back to the US, it went to prescribed locations near the recipient, and was then enlarged onto lightweight photo paper, 4.25 x 5 inches in size, for delivery to the recipient. The soldiers were urged to write legibly so that the reduced sized letters could still be read. As you can see, Punchy still has over 100 letters he wrote home to his parents…

    Aircraft recognition playing cards, and a silhouette model which hung from the ceiling.  © 2010 John Slemp

    Aircraft recognition playing cards, and a silhouette model which hung from the ceiling. © 2010 John Slemp

    These playing cards help servicemen learn how to recognize friend and foe aircraft. The metal models were hung from the ceiling of break rooms, and bets were often made as to who could name the most aircraft.

    "Gun" camera from a P-51 Mustang.

    "Gun" camera from a P-51 Mustang. © 2010 John Slemp

    This 16mm camera was linked to the pilots firing button, and recorded the action for an additional 10 seconds after release. This was so subsequent hits, explosions, etc. could still be recorded. This was important for verifying shoot downs, and the film was often used to gather intelligence as well. The camera was in such good shape that it looked like it could work today, and had a #12 yellow filter on the lens to increase contrast.

    A "friend or foe" clicker issued to all airborne troops, just prior to their D-Day jumps.  © 2010 John Slemp

    A "friend or foe" clicker issued to all airborne troops, just prior to their D-Day jumps. © 2010 John Slemp

    Lastly, Punchy shared with me a personal item issued to the airborne troops who jumped on 6 June, 1944. It was a small, metal “clicker” that we often played with as kids. I’m sure it drove my mother crazy, but they served a very important function on that day…

    Thanks! are in order to Punchy, not only for his generosity in allowing me to photograph these rare items from his collection, but for his service as a pilot in WWII as well…

    Blue Skies!

    John

     
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