Open Map
Close Map
N
Projections and Nav Modes
  • Normal View
  • Fisheye View
  • Architectural View
  • Stereographic View
  • Little Planet View
  • Panini View
Click and Drag / QTVR mode
Partager ce panorama
For Non-Commercial Use Only
This panorama can be embedded into a non-commercial site at no charge. Lire plus
Do you agree to the Terms & Conditions?
For commercial use, Contactez nous
Embed this Panorama
LargeurHauteur
For Non-Commercial Use Only
For commercial use, Contactez nous
LICENSE MODAL

0 Likes

De Havilland Vampire Jet
England

As an National Serviceman at the end of the 1950s I was posted to RAF Swinderby in Lincoln, long since closed but then a flying training school flying wide bodied, two seater Vampires. I was privaleged in being taken up a few times and allowed to take the controls in - more or less - level flight, a heady experience for a nineteen year old which I fondly remember to this day more than half a century on: Suiting up in flying gear and parashute, being strapped into the ejection seat by any numberof restricting harnesses, communicating through a squeeky throat mike, with the smell of rubber from the oxygen mask and the squirt of really cold oxygen every few seconds. I earned four pounds a week but would have gladly given that up for a few more flights in the legendary Vampire, nearly all parts of which were made by de Havilland at their Hatfield factory, near where I now live. They even made the Goblin jet engine which powered the aircraft. The de Havilland Vampire was not the first jet fighter, it came just too late to see action in the Second World War but was beaten into service with the Royal Airforce by the Glouster Meteor, another fighter which later was converted for flying trainer.

The Vampire, seen here, stands at the de Havilland Aircraft Heritage Centre, a museum established in 1959 and run solely by volunteers. Learn more here:

http://www.dehavillandmuseum.co.uk/index.html

Copyright: Mark Schuster
Type: Spherical
Resolution: 6500x3250
Taken: 26/03/2011
Chargée: 29/03/2011
Published: 01/04/2011
Affichages ::

...


Tags: aeroplane; aerodrome; plane; dehavilland; british aerospace; museum; airfield; raf; ww2; flying ; baoc; aircraft carrier
More About England


It looks like you’re creating an order.
If you have any questions before you checkout, just let us know at info@360cities.net and we’ll get right back to you.