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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/11/2012 8:03 PM   
JohnnyS


 

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Try this: Google "iron man ace" and see what comes up as the first link...

OK, new person.

1. Male.

2. Canadian.

3. Provided instruction to Howard Hughes (yes, THAT Howard Hughes) on how to fly a certain aircraft. He didn't like either Howard Hughes' attitude or his personal hygiene.

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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/12/2012 8:30 PM   
JohnnyS


 

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New clue:

1. Male.

2. Canadian.

3. Provided instruction to Howard Hughes (yes, THAT Howard Hughes) on how to fly a certain aircraft. He didn't like either Howard Hughes' attitude or his personal hygiene.

4. The aircraft on which he instructed HH (see clue #3, above) was a four engined turboprop airliner.

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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/13/2012 6:04 PM   
JohnnyS


 

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New clue:

1. Male.

2. Canadian.

3. Provided instruction to Howard Hughes (yes, THAT Howard Hughes) on how to fly a certain aircraft. He didn't like either Howard Hughes' attitude or his personal hygiene.

4. The aircraft on which he instructed HH (see clue #3, above) was a four engined turboprop airliner.

5. It was the Vickers Viscount.

6. This person also held the transatlantic speed record three times.

OK, this is PLENTY of information to figure out who I'm thinking of: Let's have some guesses!

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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/13/2012 9:18 PM   
Ernie P.


 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: JohnnyS

New clue:

1. Male.

2. Canadian.

3. Provided instruction to Howard Hughes (yes, THAT Howard Hughes) on how to fly a certain aircraft. He didn't like either Howard Hughes' attitude or his personal hygiene.

4. The aircraft on which he instructed HH (see clue #3, above) was a four engined turboprop airliner.

5. It was the Vickers Viscount.

6. This person also held the transatlantic speed record three times.

OK, this is PLENTY of information to figure out who I'm thinking of: Let's have some guesses!



I'm assuming you are talking about Donald Howard Rogers, long-time test pilot for AVRO Canada. I think most people are simply missing a connection to warbirds and warbird pilots. Thanks; Ernie P.


DON ROGERS, AVIATOR 1916-2006
The chief test pilot for A.V. Roe was the last of his breed, a brotherhood of fliers who helped set Canada on the leading edge of aviation technology. For all that, he was no swashbuckler and proud of it
PETER CHENEY
With files from Canadian Press
TORONTO As a test pilot, Don Rogers had known plenty of colleagues who died on the job. One was flying a new aircraft that came apart within sight of the airport. Another was trapped inside a fighter that went down in flames. But Mr. Rogers himself was fated to survive and was killed by cancer, not by an airplane.
Mr. Rogers was the last remaining member of a brotherhood that defined a Canadian Golden Age. As chief test pilot for the A.V. Roe company, Mr. Rogers lived with risk, and helped create iconic aircraft that once set Canada on aviation's leading edge.
The contributions of test pilots to aviation and Canadian heritage should not be taken lightly, says Andrew Hibbert, president of Arrow Recovery Canada.
"All we ever talk about now is astronauts and people like that, but these were the astronauts of their day," Mr. Hibbert said. "They were the most advanced and well-trained pilots in the world at that time."


In his own way, Mr. Rogers also personified a particular brand of Canadian gentility he was a "gentleman's gentleman."
"He was very old-school," said his son Raymond, 65. "He was quiet, he was unassuming, he was extremely modest about what he's done and accomplished."
Mr. Rogers was no swashbuckler, and had no time for those who regarded test-pilots as heroes. He said his success wasn't based on skill or nerve. Instead, he chalked it up to being "in the right place at the right time."
He was defined by flight. He grew up in Hamilton, Ont., during a time when pilots enjoyed celebrity status, and new aircraft designs captivated the public. He learned to fly at the Hamilton Aero Club and got his pilot's in 1936. It was also where he found love of a different kind. In 1940 he married June, the sweetheart he had met there.
As war loomed in the late 1930s, he took an instructor's course with the Royal Canadian Air Force and later became assistant chief flying instructor at an RCAF school in Mount Hope, Ont. In 1942, he transferred to the National Steel Car plant and tested military aircraft that would be shipped to Europe for the war effort. His logbook soon read like an airplane buff's wish list he flew Lysanders, Avro Ansons, Lancaster bombers, and B-25 Mitchell bombers. Mr. Rogers also flew two transatlantic ferry flights, now routine, but then a genuine adventure when radial piston engines leaked so much oil they had to be topped up after every flight.
His reputation as a cool and gifted pilot landed him a job at A.V. Roe, a Toronto company that would describe a tragic arc it became shining symbol of Canadian enterprise, only to crash and burn thanks to a combination of political machination and corporate myopia. Mr. Rogers's arrived at the company in 1945, just as it prepared to enter a period of unparalleled inventiveness and energy.
Mr. Rogers' position was chief test pilot. Although the title conjured up images of Errol Flynn in a white scarf, Mr. Rogers was modest about his role: "Daredevil stunts of our Hollywood and Sunday supplement counterparts have distorted the picture most people have of my profession," he once said. "Although I have always found test flying to be interesting and stimulating, I have yet to jump out of a burning plane into the arms of a beautiful woman worse luck."
The A.V. Roe plant was a vast manufacturing plant with a huge engineering department that was drawing up plans for such amazing projects as the C-102 Jetliner, a jet-powered airliner designed to hit speeds of to 800 km/h almost three times faster than the propeller-driven airliners of the time. The Jetliner flew for the first time in 1949, with hundreds of cheering A.V. Roe lining the runway. Mr. Rogers took over the testing on the Jetliner's 16th flight, and soon discovered the first major gremlin when the landing gear refused to extend. (An engineer flying with Mr. Rogers broke a rib trying to get the wheels down with an emergency handle.) The airport manager urged him to ditch the Jetliner in Lake Ontario, but Mr. Rogers was bent on saving the airplane, and made a belly landing on the runway.
The problem was quickly traced to an easily fixed design flaw. Mr. Rogers minimized the drama of the wheels-up landing: ". . . there was no problem at all as far as we were concerned," he said.
Over the next two years, Mr. Rogers broke speed records in the Jetliner and made the first international air-mail flight in a jet transport when he flew mail from Toronto to New York. Included in the cargo was a peace pipe that the mayor of Toronto told Mr. Rogers and flight engineer Bill Baker to deliver to the mayor of New York. "I didn't know which one of us was supposed to puff on the thing to keep it going," Mr. Rogers said. "I think Bill lighted it just before we landed."
In 1951, Mr. Rogers demonstrated the Jetliner to the American military and several U.S. airlines interest in the jetliner was soaring. Then politics got in the way and Ottawa ordered Avro to stop working on the Jetliner and concentrate on getting the new CF-100 jet fighter and the Orenda jet engine into production so they could be used in the Korean war.
A.V. Roe executives put the project on the backburner, against the objections of Mr. Rogers, who believed the company was poised to dominate a new market. There was only one other jet airliner in the world (the DeHavilland Comet, which flew 13 days before the C-102, but was cursed by a design flaw that caused a series of crashes). The Jetliner was ready almost a decade before the Boeing 707, which would define the age of jet travel.
But instead of continuing with the Jetliner, Avro shifted its focus to keep Ottawa happy and missed the jet market, in a move that might be compared to Bill Gates deciding to get out of the software business in the mid-1970s. "I personally feel that the company made a very bad decision at that point," Mr. Rogers said later.
Even so, the Jetliner exerted a powerful mystique. In 1952, Mr. Rogers was asked to fly the airplane to California at the request of Howard Hughes, who wanted to use it to develop new equipment. Mr. Rogers soon found himself drawn into the world of the brilliant and eccentric tycoon.

Although he was supposed to stay only 10 days, Mr. Rogers was soon placed on retainer by Mr. Hughes, who wanted him available at all times. Mr. Hughes flew in Mr. Rogers's wife and children, then rented them a luxurious former ambassador's residence in nearby Coldwater Canyon that had a swimming pool and fruit trees.
Mr. Hughes had the Jetliner moved to a guarded compound, along with several other treasured aircraft. Mr. Rogers would wait for weeks at a time, then find himself summoned for a flying session with Mr. Hughes.
Although he was an excellent pilot, the tycoon had a distinctive quirk "complete and utter disregard" for air traffic control in one of the most congested airspaces in the world. When Mr. Rogers asked him about his flight plan and other the proximity of other aircraft as they climbed up through the fog and smog of Los Angeles, Mr. Hughes replied: "Don't worry about that."
When Hollywood released the Hughes biopic The Aviator in 2005, Mr. Rogers was asked whether the movie corresponded with reality. Mr. Rogers said that the billionaire's eccentricities had been heightened in the film. "I had met and flown with a most outstanding man who was an expert pilot," he said, "and had seen something of a way of life much different than that to which I was accustomed."
From the mid-fifties onward, Mr. Rogers lived through a devastating decline at A.V. Roe. In 1956, the company decreed that the Jetliner be scrapped. Mr. Rogers stayed away from the hangar while the work went on: "I can't imagine anything more unpleasant than seeing an airplane that you have lived with for seven years and enjoyed flying a really beautiful machine being cut up with saws, axes and hammers, with pieces falling on the hangar floor," he said. ". . . it was a heart-rending experience."
Just three years later, the Diefenbaker government ordered the cancellation of the Arrow, a supersonic fighter that many saw as the apogee of Canadian technical achievement. Like the Jetliner, the Arrows were cut up for scrap.
The CF-100 jet fighter, one of its staple products, was discontinued the same year, and the company's aerial mojo was gone. Mr. Rogers became head of the company's new marine division, supervising the construction of aluminum boat hulls. Although he made the best of it, pointing out that the cockpit of a boat was far less cramped than that of the CF-100 jet he once test flew, Mr. Rogers still longed to fly, and rented private aircraft at a local flying club.
In 1962, A.V. Avro's British parent company was purchased by Hawker-Siddely, which closed the Toronto plant. The facility was later operated by other aircraft companies, including Boeing, but was demolished in 2005.
"I'm horrified to see the place going down," Mr. Rogers said. "It did a good job."
Donald Rogers was born
on Nov. 26, 1916, in Hamilton, Ont. He died of cancer on July 19, 2006, in Toronto. He was 89. He is survived by June, his wife of 66 years, and by his son Raymond and his daughter Connie. He was predeceased by his son Stephen.










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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/13/2012 9:48 PM   
JohnnyS


 

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A rare swing-and-a-miss from Ernie P!

Close, but not quite.

One more clue:

1. Male.

2. Canadian.

3. Provided instruction to Howard Hughes (yes, THAT Howard Hughes) on how to fly a certain aircraft. He didn't like either Howard Hughes' attitude or his personal hygiene.

4. The aircraft on which he instructed HH (see clue #3, above) was a four engined turboprop airliner.

5. It was the Vickers Viscount.

6. This person also held the transatlantic speed record three times

7. He was one of the first pilots of Trans-Canada Air Lines in 1937, which later became Air Canada.

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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/14/2012 1:30 AM   
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Donald MacLaren

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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/14/2012 2:44 AM   
JohnnyS


 

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Close again, but no cigar.

One more clue:

1. Male.

2. Canadian.

3. Provided instruction to Howard Hughes (yes, THAT Howard Hughes) on how to fly a certain aircraft. He didn't like either Howard Hughes' attitude or his personal hygiene.

4. The aircraft on which he instructed HH (see clue #3, above) was a four engined turboprop airliner.

5. It was the Vickers Viscount.

6. This person also held the transatlantic speed record three times

7. He was one of the first pilots of Trans-Canada Air Lines in 1937, which later became Air Canada.

8. Born in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/14/2012 4:04 AM   
psb667


 

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Gordon Roy McGregor.

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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/14/2012 1:34 PM   
JohnnyS


 

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Gordon Roy McGregor wasn't born in Vancouver. But you're getting close.

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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/14/2012 3:58 PM   
Ernie P.


 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: JohnnyS

Gordon Roy McGregor wasn't born in Vancouver. But you're getting close.



JohnnyS;

I still can’t figure out a connection with warbirds or warbird pilots, but you have to be talking about George Lothian. What’s the connection? I’m really curious about this one. Thanks; Ernie P.


George Bayliss Lothian
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

George Bayliss Lothian was born November 20, 1909 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. He was one of the first pilots of Trans-Canada Air Lines in 1937, which later became Air Canada. He died February 13, 2000.

Aviation career

George Lothian was the first Canadian pilot to log 100 aircraft crossings of the North Atlantic and set the trans-Atlantic crossing speed record three times. When he retired from Air Canada in 1968 he had logged over 21,000 as pilot in command of many different piston and jet transport aircraft. He reluctantly gave flight instruction in the Vickers Viscount turboprop airliner to Howard Hughes and did not appreciate either his personal hygiene or his attitude.



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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/14/2012 5:17 PM   
JohnnyS


 

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Bingo. George Bayliss Lothian is the person I was looking for. He was a ferry pilot in WWII, so he ferried warbirds across the Atlantic.

From: http://www.cahf.ca/members/L_members.php#George%20Bayliss%20Lothian

George Bayliss Lothian

Birthdate: November 20, 1909
Birth Place: Vancouver, British Columbia
Year Inducted: 1973
Death Date: February 13, 2000

"His inspired leadership in ocean flying despite adversity, the sharing of his exceptional aviation skills with others willing to learn, his unswerving demand for perfection in all who served under his command, bred a most superior grade of airman and resulted in outstanding benefit to Canadian aviation."

George Lothian was one of the first pilots for Trans-Canada Air Lines, established in 1937. Seconded to the Trans-Atlantic Ferry Service, he became the first Canadian pilot to complete 100 air crossings of the North Atlantic. Achievements with Air Canada included winning the trans-Atlantic speed record 3 times, training pilots, and participating in rapid decompression experiments. After retiring in 1968, he had achieved more than 21,000 hours as pilot-in-command of numerous aircraft types and more than 1,000 air crossings of the North Atlantic Ocean.


On a side note, I had the privilege of meeting him in the early 1980s when my dad introduced me. My dad told me that he didn't know anyone who could make a big four-engined bomber "behave" properly like George Lothian could.

You're up!!

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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/14/2012 10:11 PM   
Ernie P.


 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: JohnnyS

Bingo. George Bayliss Lothian is the person I was looking for. He was a ferry pilot in WWII, so he ferried warbirds across the Atlantic.

From: http://www.cahf.ca/members/L_members.php#George%20Bayliss%20Lothian

George Bayliss Lothian

Birthdate: November 20, 1909
Birth Place: Vancouver, British Columbia
Year Inducted: 1973
Death Date: February 13, 2000

''His inspired leadership in ocean flying despite adversity, the sharing of his exceptional aviation skills with others willing to learn, his unswerving demand for perfection in all who served under his command, bred a most superior grade of airman and resulted in outstanding benefit to Canadian aviation.''

George Lothian was one of the first pilots for Trans-Canada Air Lines, established in 1937. Seconded to the Trans-Atlantic Ferry Service, he became the first Canadian pilot to complete 100 air crossings of the North Atlantic. Achievements with Air Canada included winning the trans-Atlantic speed record 3 times, training pilots, and participating in rapid decompression experiments. After retiring in 1968, he had achieved more than 21,000 hours as pilot-in-command of numerous aircraft types and more than 1,000 air crossings of the North Atlantic Ocean.


On a side note, I had the privilege of meeting him in the early 1980s when my dad introduced me. My dad told me that he didn't know anyone who could make a big four-engined bomber ''behave'' properly like George Lothian could.

You're up!!



Thanks for the background and the question. Okay; let's stay with aviators for a while. Thanks; Ernie P.


Question: What ace do I describe?

Clues:

(1) His name is on all the lists, prominently so.

(2) After being rejected for pilot training, he learned to fly at his own expense.


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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/15/2012 12:13 AM   
Ernie P.


 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: JohnnyS

Bingo. George Bayliss Lothian is the person I was looking for. He was a ferry pilot in WWII, so he ferried warbirds across the Atlantic.

From: http://www.cahf.ca/members/L_members.php#George%20Bayliss%20Lothian

George Bayliss Lothian

Birthdate: November 20, 1909
Birth Place: Vancouver, British Columbia
Year Inducted: 1973
Death Date: February 13, 2000

''His inspired leadership in ocean flying despite adversity, the sharing of his exceptional aviation skills with others willing to learn, his unswerving demand for perfection in all who served under his command, bred a most superior grade of airman and resulted in outstanding benefit to Canadian aviation.''

George Lothian was one of the first pilots for Trans-Canada Air Lines, established in 1937. Seconded to the Trans-Atlantic Ferry Service, he became the first Canadian pilot to complete 100 air crossings of the North Atlantic. Achievements with Air Canada included winning the trans-Atlantic speed record 3 times, training pilots, and participating in rapid decompression experiments. After retiring in 1968, he had achieved more than 21,000 hours as pilot-in-command of numerous aircraft types and more than 1,000 air crossings of the North Atlantic Ocean.


On a side note, I had the privilege of meeting him in the early 1980s when my dad introduced me. My dad told me that he didn't know anyone who could make a big four-engined bomber ''behave'' properly like George Lothian could.

You're up!!



By the way; isn't it really neat to be able to talk to the warriors of that day? Too few of them are left, though. They were something. Thanks; Ernie P.

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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/15/2012 1:26 AM   
Ernie P.


 

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An evening clue. Thanks; Ernie P.


Question: What ace do I describe?

Clues:

(1) His name is on all the lists, prominently so.

(2) After being rejected for pilot training, he learned to fly at his own expense.

(3) Considered, at best, to be a very ordinary pilot, he suffered a number of mishaps from his poor flying.


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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/15/2012 1:32 PM   
Ernie P.


 

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And a morning clue. Thanks; Ernie P.


Question: What ace do I describe?

Clues:

(1) His name is on all the lists, prominently so.

(2) After being rejected for pilot training, he learned to fly at his own expense.

(3) Considered, at best, to be a very ordinary pilot, he suffered a number of mishaps from his poor flying.

(4) After a year’s service, during which he achieved notable success, he was given an extended leave.


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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/15/2012 3:01 PM   
Ernie P.


 

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I'm going to be out of touch for 24 hours or so. I'll give you a couple of extra clues upon which to cogitate until I return. Thanks; Ernie P.


Question: What ace do I describe?

Clues:

(1) His name is on all the lists, prominently so.

(2) After being rejected for pilot training, he learned to fly at his own expense.

(3) Considered, at best, to be a very ordinary pilot, he suffered a number of mishaps from his poor flying.

(4) After a year’s service, during which he achieved notable success, he was given an extended leave.

(5) He voluntarily returned to action and was killed less than three months later.

(6) A noted and successful athlete.


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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/16/2012 8:33 PM   
Ernie P.


 

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Back with an afternoon clue. Thanks; Ernie P.


Question: What ace do I describe?

Clues:

(1) His name is on all the lists, prominently so.

(2) After being rejected for pilot training, he learned to fly at his own expense.

(3) Considered, at best, to be a very ordinary pilot, he suffered a number of mishaps from his poor flying.

(4) After a year’s service, during which he achieved notable success, he was given an extended leave.

(5) He voluntarily returned to action and was killed less than three months later.

(6) A noted and successful athlete.

(7) It is still debated as to whether he was hit from a bullet fired by an enemy aviator or one fired from the ground.


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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/17/2012 3:15 AM   
Ernie P.


 

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Hmmm.... I know this one isn't that hard. JohnnyS already has it, but he can't play this week. Thanks; Ernie P.


Question: What ace do I describe?

Clues:

(1) His name is on all the lists, prominently so.

(2) After being rejected for pilot training, he learned to fly at his own expense.

(3) Considered, at best, to be a very ordinary pilot, he suffered a number of mishaps from his poor flying.

(4) After a year’s service, during which he achieved notable success, he was given an extended leave.

(5) He voluntarily returned to action and was killed less than three months later.

(6) A noted and successful athlete.

(7) It is still debated as to whether he was hit from a bullet fired by an enemy aviator or one fired from the ground.

(8) In the beginning of his flying career, he suffered from airsickness.


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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/17/2012 3:30 AM   
Mein Duff



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Manfred Freiherr Von Richtofen ??

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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/17/2012 11:14 AM   
Ernie P.


 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Mein Duff

Manfred Freiherr Von Richtofen ??



Nope; not the Baron. Maybe this will help. Thanks; Ernie P.


Question: What ace do I describe?

Clues:

(1) His name is on all the lists, prominently so.

(2) After being rejected for pilot training, he learned to fly at his own expense.

(3) Considered, at best, to be a very ordinary pilot, he suffered a number of mishaps from his poor flying.

(4) After a year’s service, during which he achieved notable success, he was given an extended leave.

(5) He voluntarily returned to action and was killed less than three months later.

(6) A noted and successful athlete.

(7) It is still debated as to whether he was hit from a bullet fired by an enemy aviator or one fired from the ground.

(8) In the beginning of his flying career, he suffered from airsickness.

(9) A tenacious aerial fighter, he once landed, cleared his jammed machine guns and rejoined the fight.


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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/17/2012 5:10 PM   
psb667


 

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william bishop

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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/17/2012 5:28 PM   
Mein Duff



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Mick Mannock?

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RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/17/2012 6:37 PM   
Ernie P.


 

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Joined: 9/29/2007
Last Login: 5/18/2013
From: Bealeton, VA, USA
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No, not Bishop or Mannock. This clue may shed some light. As a hint: Most WWI aces, at least those who were the most successful, learned early that being aggressive and fearless could get in the way of survival. This ace was one who was noted for tackling the enemy wherever and whenever he found him. Thanks; Ernie P.


Question: What ace do I describe?

Clues:

(1) His name is on all the lists, prominently so.

(2) After being rejected for pilot training, he learned to fly at his own expense.

(3) Considered, at best, to be a very ordinary pilot, he suffered a number of mishaps from his poor flying.

(4) After a year’s service, during which he achieved notable success, he was given an extended leave.

(5) He voluntarily returned to action and was killed less than three months later.

(6) A noted and successful athlete.

(7) It is still debated as to whether he was hit from a bullet fired by an enemy aviator or one fired from the ground.

(8) In the beginning of his flying career, he suffered from airsickness.

(9) A tenacious aerial fighter, he once landed, cleared his jammed machine guns and rejoined the fight.

(10) Noted for being a crack shot and very, very aggressive.


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(in reply to Mein Duff)
       Post #: 7723

RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/17/2012 9:35 PM   
The Raven



Posts: 933
Score: 105
Joined: 1/6/2005
Last Login: 5/16/2013
From: Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Status: offline
Clue 7 gives it away but I'll leave it to others to guess who it is

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(in reply to Ernie P.)
       Post #: 7724

RE: Knowledge Quiz for Warbird wiz - 12/17/2012 11:43 PM   
Ernie P.


 

Posts: 2156
Score: 100
Joined: 9/29/2007
Last Login: 5/18/2013
From: Bealeton, VA, USA
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: The Raven

Clue 7 gives it away but I'll leave it to others to guess who it is


I have no doubt you know the answer. But for the others, here's a night time clue. Thanks; Ernie P.


Question: What ace do I describe?

Clues:

(1) His name is on all the lists, prominently so.

(2) After being rejected for pilot training, he learned to fly at his own expense.

(3) Considered, at best, to be a very ordinary pilot, he suffered a number of mishaps from his poor flying.

(4) After a year’s service, during which he achieved notable success, he was given an extended leave.

(5) He voluntarily returned to action and was killed less than three months later.

(6) A noted and successful athlete.

(7) It is still debated as to whether he was hit from a bullet fired by an enemy aviator or one fired from the ground.

(8) In the beginning of his flying career, he suffered from airsickness.

(9) A tenacious aerial fighter, he once landed, cleared his jammed machine guns and rejoined the fight.

(10) Noted for being a crack shot and very, very aggressive.

(11) He loved flowers.


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(in reply to The Raven)
       Post #: 7725

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