46 Votes (4.52 Moyenne) et 10.963 Vues  

51-0151 — - Douglas C-124A later converted to a "C" Globemaster II 51-0151 RAAF East Sale (YMES) early 1960s USAF Crowflight support.
/images/icons/csMagGlass.png moyen / grand / plein format

51-0151 —

Soumis

Douglas C-124A later converted to a "C" Globemaster II 51-0151 RAAF East Sale (YMES) early 1960s USAF Crowflight support.

Comments

Please log in or register to post a comment.

Kurt FingerPhoto Uploader
The guys, on the right dragging the two wheeled cart are filling the gaps between the concrete slabs with a tar like filler.
Dave Sheehy
Kurt-was it you who put the props in "Y" position for this shot lol? Nice picture thanks for sharing.
ian mcdonell
Many thanks Kurt - I have been following you work on Airliners and really appreciate seeing the old stuff
Kurt FingerPhoto Uploader
Dave.Thank you, you're very kind. No, it wasn't me. I can add to it,in the RAAF on the C-47, we as engine technicians had to put the blades in that position on our pre and after flight checks. For us it made easier to pull the engines through on pre flight, that was done to shift collected engine oil from the bottom cylinders of a radial engine.
Kurt FingerPhoto Uploader
Ian, thank you it's my pleasure. I have slowed down on Airliners, majority if my slides negative film are in bad shape. I don't mind the time getting them to an acceptable quality. However it takes a fair while before you get word back on acceptance or not. Thanks again for your comments.
Kurt FingerPhoto Uploader
Ian, I just had a look at your great collection of photos.I'm envious.
ian mcdonell
Many thanks Kurt, you are more than kind
I wish I still had my stuff from the 60's but unfortunately it is long gone
People like you, Danny Tanner, Tony Arbon etc bring back great memories
Alan Brown
Seems there is a misidentification here. The Globemaster II is a C-124, not a C-123. The C-123 was the "Provider" and was only 2 engine.
jdaigneau
Not to be too picky, but it's actually a C-124, "Big Shaky".
Dave Sheehy
Kurt-thanks and I sure can identify with the the oil in the lower cylinders! If you check in my gallery with the link, the mechanic on the ladder on the inboard B-4 stand is me, covered with oil ! :)

http://flightaware.com/photos/view/828498-74e1555319f9007ce807aa84f8f09ce9e7fe9560/user/davesheehy/sort/votes/page/1
Kurt FingerPhoto Uploader
Alan, thanks for pointing out out the "typo". I agree with you the Fairchild Provider did have only two engines.
Kurt FingerPhoto Uploader
daigneau thank you for your comment, much appreciated. Have corrected the "typo".
Kurt FingerPhoto Uploader
Dave, it was a hazard. Didn't matter how hard you tried you always finished with oil on you. Thanks for the illustration.
Blakeersom
THIS IS A C-124C NOT A C-124A. THE A MODEL DID NOT HAVE HEATERS ON WING TIPS. I HAVE OVER 2000 HOURS AS A FLIGHT ENGINEER ON THE C MODEL.
fuzzo706
I rode on this aircraft type Shaw AFB to Udorn Thailand in 1965. What a drag. I was an USAF rescue helo pilot and we were bring aircraft and people on three C-124. No a/c, no pressure and the best speed around 200 kts. I think it took over two weeks as the aircraft broke on every landing. In 1969 I was flying these aircraft at RG AFB Kansas City while working for TWA flying the B-707. It was called "old shakey " and the F/E should have been wearing stars as he could say weather it stopped or went. I fled it to Europe and Asia during this time but I never really felt comfortable in the A/C seat.
Kurt FingerPhoto Uploader
Blakeersom thank you for your insight. I had this one and the other photos of the C-124 down as "C" models. However recently another viewer indicated they were "A" models.The viewer mentioned the "A" model had round propeller tips and the "C" had square tips. A web search showed the C-124 had more powerful engine fitted. What I learned from you is I didn't know the wing tip pods were heaters. The following link takes you to the comment that it is a "A" model. lightaware.com/photos/view/6646302-7f3a9f8b128148bc096afee3afd3ac5f9249d2df/user/kurtfinger/sort/votes/page/1
Kurt FingerPhoto Uploader
Blakeersom. Joe Baugher pages mention the conversion from an "A" to a "C" but not the date of the conversion.
JOURNAL DE L'ACTIVITE
Vous voulez une recherche complète sur l'historique de 51-0151 depuis 1998? Achetez maintenant. Recevez-le dans l'heure.
Date Avion Provenance Destination Départ Arrivée Durée
No Recent History Data
Les utilisateurs élémentaires (l'inscription est gratuite et facile !) peuvent voir 3 months d'historique. S'inscrire
 

Se connecter

Vous n'avez pas de compte? Inscrivez-vous maintenant (gratuitement) pour des fonctionnalités personnalisées, des alertes de vols, et plus encore!
Saviez-vous que le suivi des vols FlightAware est soutenu par la publicité ?
Vous pouvez nous aider à garder FlightAware gratuit en autorisant les annonces de FlightAware.com. Nous travaillons dur pour que notre publicité reste pertinente et discrète afin de créer une expérience formidable. Il est facile et rapide de mettre les annonces en liste blanche sur FlightAware ou d’examiner nos comptes premium.
Abandonner