Slightly off topic already...but what's that airplane sitting there pretty close to the "A?" Looks like a turbine Convair to me, but I'm not sure.
Convair CV340, I think.
Dan
This Convair 240 once belonged to American Airlines and then Mohawk Airlines until it sat derelict for over a decade at the Daytona airport.Slightly off topic already...but what's that airplane sitting there pretty close to the "A?" Looks like a turbine Convair to me, but I'm not sure.
I always wondered what he looked like. Does he still keep a razor in his shoe?Retired Pan Am Capt. LeRoy Brown bought the plane and moved it to Apopka as a museum
I always wondered what he looked like. Does he still keep a razor in his shoe?
That question is probably lost on the under 40 crowd, but I not me!
This Convair 240 once belonged to American Airlines and then Mohawk Airlines until it sat derelict for over a decade at the Daytona airport.
92 year old Retired Pan Am Capt. LeRoy Brown bought the plane and moved it to Apopka as a museum piece.
Interesting article on Capt Brown and his life and flying history can be found here.
Interesting, it's been at least a decade since I last flew into Apopka.
Back then it was known as Orlando Country Airport and it was a tiny runway with a very narrow width that never seemed to get bigger even on final.
The airport was bought out by some investor that promised to build some hangars and enlarge the existing runway.
Apparently the enlargement has come in so many rapid phases that the line painters can't keep up.
My boss bought a hangar lot there and got caught up in the furor since the developer was talking a business jet port and the FAA shortened the effective runway. Now (I have been told) insurance companies do not want to base any business jets at a field that short. The property values have dropped and those who own them are not happy.
I have landed and taken off from there in a 172 and it's plenty for that of course.
John
Caution... Wake Turbulence. OH COME ON!