Plane Tales show

Plane Tales

Summary: Captain Nick Anderson, aka The Old Pilot, takes us on an aviation audio journey each week on the Airline Pilot Guy Aviation Podcast

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  • Artist: Capt Nick
  • Copyright: Airline Pilot Guy Podcast by Captain Jeff is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

Podcasts:

 The Auger Inn and Other Fine Establishments | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 19:15

I’ve talked a lot about alcohol over the past few Plane Tales and mainly about the negative aspects but it remains one of the few socially acceptable drugs that we can imbibe. With our propensity for travelling the world, fighter jocks, trash haulers, airline crews and the rest, have always managed to find some fascinating watering holes to frequent to let the stress of the day gently drain away in convivial company over a drink or two. With that in mind I asked the crew to tell me about one or two of their favourite establishments.   The brewing and consumption of beer has a long and interesting history.   The Royal Navy rum tub of HMS Cavaller.   Steph's Ski Bar.   Inside Molly's.   Great views of the slopes.   The entrance to Rick's Aero Club of East Africa.   The smell of bourbon, cigarette smoke, aviation gasoline and Wood polish.   The walls are adorned with fascinating artifacts.   And memories of pilots long past.   Because old pilots never die...   One of Jeff's favourites the Diego Garcia Officer's Club.   And the Randolph Officers Club.   Under which is found the wonderful old Auger Inn.   The tall windows of the Big Room in the Royal and Ancient golf club.   An evening out in Narita started in the Flyers Bar.   Moved on to the Bon Cafe for all you can eat teppanyaki.   Then to the Barge Inn.   And finally the infamous Truck (Trailer).     Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the Library of Congress, Hammersfan, Steph, Rick, Jeff, Nick and Gordon McKinlay.

 Life’s Too Short | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 19:15

Flying is an environment where the pilot's senses, coordination and mental faculties are vital to the safe conduct of a flight. Getting airborne having taken something that might impair one’s flying ability is a complete anathema to the vast majority of aviators so it is vital that we look at ourselves and our fellow pilots to recognise those who might need help.   The route taken by Aero 311.   The Bay of Bothnia.   An Aero DC3.   The crash site of Aero 311.   The JAL 8054 DC8 Freighter.   The DC8 crash site.     The Aeroflot Flight 821 crash site.   Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the NTSB, Alma Media Suomi Oy, Jjm2311, Ritvara,  Aktug Ates, MAK,

 The Well Dressed Aviator | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 19:40

When the gentlemen aviators of the First World War were looking for protective clothing to wear whilst doing battle over the trenches of the Somme, they visited establishments such as Alfred Dunhill’s where they were invited to alight for the best equipment.  This is the story of such wonderful flying garb as the Sidcot Suit, the Irving jacket and the classic American flight and bomber jackets.   A 1930 'Sidcot' suit.   The G1 Navy Flight Jacket.   Steve McQueen in his A2.   Chuck Yeager in his B10.     Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the FAST Archive, the Imperial War Museum, Solicitr, USAF, Dunhill's and Robinson and Cleaver.

 The Bat Bomb | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 20:04

Necessity is the mother of invention so it's often during war that the most amazing contrivances are developed... and some of the most ridiculous.  This is a look at a few of the less successful wartime inventions!   The Bat Bomb.   During testing, a few bats escaped and disaster followed!    A slab of Pykrete with a bullet mark.   The proposed Pykrete aircraft carrier.   The Bat guided bomb used in Project Pigeon.   The Fu-Go hydrogen balloon bomb.   A Fu-Go balloon found near Bigelow, Kansas on February 23, 1945.   A rendition of the proposed Nazi Sun Gun.   Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to US Army, US Gov, USAF, CyranoDeWikipedia, Teramatt, US National Archives, and the US Navy Archives.

 The Ian Palmer Interviews, Part 4 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 20:14

In this, the final part of the Ian Palmer interviews we find out about another life threatening concern that Ian had to deal with and how it led to a wonderful relationship. After my many years in the world of aviation there aren’t many people I have met who would be willing to open up their lives in the way that Ian has done.  In doing so my regard and respect for him has done nothing but grow.  Should anybody listening feel that they want to seek Ian out to ask for his help or advice then please contact him at Ian@ianpalmer.com   Brain surgery isn't for the faint hearted but Ian, with typical understatement, tackled it head on!   Ian, back on the flight deck of his beloved Airbus A330.   Images with thanks to Ian Palmer.

 The Ian Palmer Interviews, Part 3 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 18:58

The third Ian Palmer interview deals with Ian's attempts to overcome his condition of alcohol dependance and how his life moved on.   Ian rehearsing with his friend and mentor, Steve Gadd.   Images with thanks to Ian Palmer.

 The Ian Palmer Interviews, Part 2 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 18:49

In this, the second of the Ian Palmer interviews we continue with Ian's story and he describes his move from a career in music to one in aviation.  We also find out how his condition of alcohol dependance starts to affect him.   Ian doing aerobatics in an Extra 300.   The unusual Piaggio P-180.   Ian meets the Iron Maiden drummer, Nicko McBrain.   Images with thanks to Ian Palmer and, under Creative Commons licence,Tibboh.

 Homage to a Pilot | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 20:36

My father was beacon that led me into the world of aviation and steered me unerringly through my flying life more accurately than any gauge or needle on my instrument panel.  He grew up on the white sand beaches of Western Australia, fought in the Second World War on the Sunderland Flying boats of No 10 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force and continued to fly in peacetime, plying his way around the world on firstly the DC2 and finally the B747. He became a restaurateur, avocado farmer and eventually learned to rest with an occasional game of lawn bowls.  He even agreed to let me record some interviews about his life.  Sadly, he is no longer with us. A No 10 Sqn RAAF Sunderland flying-boat of Coastal Command sets out on patrol.   Flt Lt Andy Anderson with his Sunderland crew.   An Airwork Vickers Viking.   A Kuwait Airways Boeing 747.   His final years.   Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to RuthAS and Adrian Pingstone.

 The Ian Palmer Interviews, Part 1 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 18:26

Ian Palmer's life has hardly gone as smoothly as he might have wished.  Born into a family of musicians, particularly drummers including Carl Palmer of the band ELP, he started off as a very successful drummer himself.  What he didn't know was that he suffered from a condition that carries great stigma and frequently leads to ruin and death... alcoholism. This is the first part of an inspiring and brutally honest interview that follows his life from drumming into aviation. Title image: Ian Palmer with Steve White of the Paul Weller band, Brian Bennett of The Shadows and Pete Cater. Ian Palmer... drummer.   Images with thanks to Ian Palmer.  

 Willy Wonka and the Fighter Pilot | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 19:07

Born in Wales to immigrant parents he would grow to a height of 6’ 6” and climbing into the cockpit of a World War II fighter was going to be a problem… but he managed it and before long had earned the moniker Lofty.  He would pen books that charmed children for generations and generations for Lofty, who was an army officer, fighter pilot and spy was better known as the renown author who sold over 100 million copies of his books, Roald Dahl.   Roald Dahl.   The Gloster Gladiator.   Roald Dahl's WWII flying helmet.   Roald Dahl in later life signing books in Amsterdam in front of an adoring audience.   Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Paramount pictures, the US Library of Congress, the British Government, DeFacto and Rob Bogaerts.

 The Man Who Fell to Earth | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 18:15

Fifty three years ago a man fell to earth.  He came from space having survived the appallingly hostile conditions that exist there.  Apart from the hard vacuum, the electromagnetic radiation, the intense cold, the cosmic rays and other damaging particles that exist there.  Despite overcoming numerous failures on his Soyuz-1 spacecraft he had achieved the near impossible and piloted a manual reentry... all he had to do now was to wait for the life saving parachutes to deploy. Colonel Vladimir Komarov   The Soyuz 1 capsule.   The aftermath of the Soyuz 1 crash.   The commemorative plaque and the Fallen Astronaut sculpture left on the Moon by the crew of Apollo 15.   Vladimir Komarov with his wife Valentina Yakovlevna and daughter Irina.   Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to NFCC, Smithsonian Institute, NASA and the US Gov.

 The Butcher Bird | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 15:27

The German name for the Shrike songbird is Würger, which also means Strangler and by coincidence, was also the name given to the Focke-Wulf 190, a World War II fighter which quickly became one of the most feared Axis fighters of the 2nd World War.  Various dubious plans were made to get hold of one to reveal its secrets but then along came Oberleutnant Armin Faber.   Armin Faber's gift in RAF markings.   The Shoreham Aircraft Museum.   Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the Imperial War Museum, FO Watkins and the Shoreham Aircraft Museum.

 The Battle of A Sầu | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 20:10

Dick Andrews was flying over the battle of A Sầu in Vietnam and feeling deja view as he saw what was going on beneath him.  It took his mind back to the day in WWII when he landed his P38 Lightning in a field to rescue his leader who had crash landed there.  Now he was watching the same thing happening below except a Skyraider was landing amongst enemy Viet Cong and not German troops.  A remarkable coincidence and a remarkable pair of stories.     Bernie Fisher wearing his Medal of Honour in 2008.   Fisher and Myers after the rescue.   Fisher's damaged A-1E.   Dick Andrews and Dick Willsie squeezed into the same P38 cockpit.     Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the USAF and March Field Air Museum.

 The Triangle | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 21:36

I was about to enter the Devil's Triangle, the Limbo of the Lost, the Twilight Zone or the Hoodoo Sea… more commonly referred to as the Bermuda Triangle.  What dangers awaited, would I disappear like the famous loss of the 5 Avengers of Flight 19!  Listen to this terrifying story of myth and mystery!   A fine example of a Pseudoscience.   The Bermuda Triangle.   Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Lt Cdr Horace Bristol, US Navy, Alphaios and People's Cyclopedia of Universal Knowledge (1883)

 The A320 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 18:12

Boeing was the most successful aircraft manufacturing company on the planet but a European consortium thought they could take on the world's best selling airliner, the B737, with a design of their own.  So was borne the A320 family of airliners with the most daring and radical of technological advances that the airline industry had seen since the advent of the jet engine.  But the birth of the A320 was marred by a controversial crash that might sink the project before it had got going! A tale produced to celebrate the A320 Podcast’s 100th show.   The larger A321...   ... and very much smaller A318.   Appendix 3 of the BEA final report into the crash of Air France flight 296.   The A320 and B737 in competition.     Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Ken Fielding, Bill Larkins, Austrian Airlines, Aero Icarus and the BEA.

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