jsterner
Pre-Flight
J3 then c175 and Luscombe.
Voted C152. Regardless what anyone thinks I believe it's the best trainer there is. Completely different than a 172 imo.
Jeff, I suppose that's possible, but the aero club inventory listed it as a 1959 150. Sadly, I stored some things at my parents' house for a couple of years after I separated from active duty and was working on Johnston Island, and my original logbook got "misplaced", so I don't have a record of the tail number.That looks like a 140A modified with tri-gear!
Here's what the '59 150 looked like on the ground with weight on the gear -- similar to later 150s. Factory 150 main gear was mounted lower and further inboard than in your photo. 150 main gear also curved downward slightly. The main gear in your photo appears straight, even slightly bowed out, like 140 main gear. The 150 nose gear has very little strut visible above the oleo shaft, and the torque link faces aft. The nose gear in your photo doesn't look like a Cessna design at all.The early 150s had tall gear and that very spindly nose strut. Here's the '59 150 brochure cover. The cover photo shows the "Inter-city commuter" trim with fancy paint and wheel pants.
Ah ha! I think you're right. I have a higher resolution photo I cropped on the gear, and there's a tell-tale patch right where the 140 main gear would have been. I think I remember the vertical stabilizer and rudder were rounded like the 140, too.Here's what the '59 150 looked like on the ground with weight on the gear -- similar to later 150s. Factory 150 main gear was mounted lower and further inboard than in your photo. 150 main gear also curved downward slightly. The main gear in your photo appears straight, even slightly bowed out, like 140 main gear. The 150 nose gear has very little strut visible above the oleo shaft, and the torque link faces aft.
That's a very rare bird indeed and a very interesting photo.
View attachment 57213
Also, the airplane in your photo has the factory Model 140A paint scheme:
View attachment 57214
LOL that uniform! I don't know if they had that when I went in in '67, but that shirt may have been an accessory item I think.
I was in tech school at Lowry (Aurora, CO) in the winter of '62 and I had to purchase the shirt at the BX. Trousers were regular wool dress blues. The shirt was long sleeve and wool, so perfect for cool days when this skinny Florida cracker would have frozen in 505s (short sleeve cotton khaki).
Zlin 242If your answer is "other", do tell.
PA-11 Cub.
On floats.
Zlin 242
Diamond DA20. Great training for my RV-9A, as both have stick controls, a slick airframe and free-castoring nose wheel.
My flight school at John Wayne had two of them...66NA and 253JP.
View attachment 57216
Diamond DA20. Great training for my RV-9A, as both have stick controls, a slick airframe and free-castoring nose wheel.
My flight school at John Wayne had two of them...66NA and 253JP.
View attachment 57216
Holy crap lol... I pay almost that much just in taxes renting a basic 172 for a couple hrs.$16.00 per hour wet. (1977)
I instructed at Long Beach CA in the early '70s, where prices would likely be higher than in Kansas. Our '69 and '71 Cherokee 140s went for $16.00/hour wet -- except for N95174, which, because its single Narco Mark 12A had a glideslope and 360 com channels instead of 90, was our "instrument trainer" and went for $16.50. CFI time was $6/hour, of which we got half.The Sierra belonged to the Beech Flying Club in Salina, Ks -- $16.00 per hour wet. (1977)
ASEL - Cessna 172
AMEL - Beechcraft Duchess
ASES - Citabria on straight floats