Admin Posted Friday at 11:46 PM Posted Friday at 11:46 PM In a freak accident, an unmanned plane took off from a Sydney airstrip by itself on August 30, 1955. When a pilot in training suffered engine troubles, he landed at Bankstown Airport. After he climbed out, he spun the propeller by hand and the plane unexpectedly started moving on its own. The Auster, like this one below, somehow took off from the runway and began flying in ever wider circles. For hours the unmanned plane flew over the city, its range extending from Mascot to Vaucluse, over Punchbowl, Rockdale, Redfern and the CBD. RAAF planes were dispatched from Richmond and Newcastle to shoot down the plane over the ocean, but they were unsuccessful. Eventually two British pilots JR Bluett and Peter McNay, who had flown up from Nowra, were able to knock the plane out of the sky. The two pilots were celebrated, but the Australian government was grilled on why it took three hours to successfully intercept a light plane with nobody flying it. 2 1 2 1
facthunter Posted Saturday at 01:42 AM Posted Saturday at 01:42 AM I remember that Happening . It was a 2 seat version. Archer or Aiglet. Nev
Admin Posted Saturday at 03:34 AM Author Posted Saturday at 03:34 AM 1 hour ago, facthunter said: I remember that Happening . It was a 2 seat version. Archer or Aiglet. Nev Nev, the news story says it was an Auster
facthunter Posted Saturday at 03:59 AM Posted Saturday at 03:59 AM That's the 2 two seat versions of the Auster Range.. They didn't have flaps. 90 Hp Motor, usually a Cirrus Minor. Nev.
Flightrite Posted Saturday at 04:52 AM Posted Saturday at 04:52 AM (edited) Still happens today, just not M/T😂😂 That event was an embarrassing time for Australian military😂😂 Edited Saturday at 04:54 AM by Flightrite
danny_galaga Posted Saturday at 09:37 AM Posted Saturday at 09:37 AM How on earth were they not able to shoot it down 😧 I can imagine the procurement process: "Cancel those new Mirage Jets! Auster is where it's at!"
kgwilson Posted Saturday at 11:33 PM Posted Saturday at 11:33 PM (edited) 1955, 10 years after the end on WW2, just after Korea and before Vietnam. The RAAF probably didn't have any live ammo in any of their aircraft or those capable were too far away or in maintenance. There is an Aiglet at South Grafton & it has a Cirrus minor engine. 4 straight exhausts out the bottom. Very noisy. Edited Saturday at 11:37 PM by kgwilson 1 1
facthunter Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago It was probably trimmed way back for the Last landing and wandering around in ups and downs and you wouldn't want to drop it in the Burbs. Nev 1
Moneybox Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago Obviously trimmed nicely so you'd need to strike critical mechanical components to disable it. I remember my old man telling us stories of the early military aircraft build from timber frame and cloth skin, the bullets just passed right through causing almost no damage at all. 1
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