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Chateau de Goulaine?

 

Quote from Wikipedia - According to a report published by the Bank of Korea on May 14, 2008 investigating 41 countries, there were 5,586 companies older than 200 years. From these 3,146 are located in Japan, 837 inGermany, 222 in the Netherlands and 196 in France.[1] 89.4% of the companies with more than 100 years of history are businesses employing fewer than 300 people.[1][2] A nationwide Japanese survey counted more than 21,000 companies older than 100 years as from September 30, 2009.[3] - End Quote

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Wing struts above the wing have to be big - they're in compression rather than tension and have to be beefy enough to not buckle. Wings struts below the wing are in tension and the load-bearing elemen

But can it lay an egg?   I've seen photos of that one before but don't know what it is or where it's based.  Such poor taste in flying objects is more commonly seen in the hot air balloon ge

What a cock up.

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This aircraft did not go into production but three prototypes flew and provided important developmental data for a successor by the same company that did make it into series production.

 

John

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Right on the first try, March,  Yakovlev Yak-36 Freehand - Russian - their first attempt at a VTOL fighter, which led to Yak-38 Forger.  The latter actually got into production but wasn't all that impressive either.

 

John

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Nuts! I should have used the nose. You guys are too good at picking a good piece of tail.

 

I bow to your Alan and Andrew, herinafter called the A Team, superior plane spotting skills. 

 

Alan was first with the answer, so over to you Alan.

 

A consolation prize for Andrew in the form of the full picture:

 

i-Kj4NNqs-M.jpg

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That's a very pleasing-looking aircraft. I particularly like the retractable arrangement.

 

The name Phoenix is usually reserved for something that "rises from the ashes". I looked this little airplane up in Wiki and it sounds like it and its sister-ships did exactly the opposite.

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The aircraft was built just across the road from where I used to live.Heston Airfield is now largely under the M4 Motorway and a large industrial estate. The last suriving pats of the field to go were the large blue and white Fairey Hangars but a large plaque on the site of the airfield tells of it's history. The last aircraft on the site was an Auster that was in static display at an Air Scouts headquarters just off Cranford Lane. Heston Airfields biggest claim to fame was when Nevill Chamberlain landed there with the "Peace in our time" agreement from Germany in 1938 (see link). The airfield survived until just after WW2 when Fairey Aviation moved all their operations to the Great West Aerodrome to the west of Cranford. That airfield is still in use today...known as Heathrow! One of the Heathrow windsocks is is the original from Faireys days!

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