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Triva Time II (an easy one this time)
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Re: Triva Time II (an easy one this time)
LOL! ...now wait a minute, when was the last time you saw a barn with doors big enough to actually fly threw? A Jenny or Standards wingspan is probably 35’+, so tell me how common was this to see, maybe a large hanger…but not a barn!
Re: Triva Time II (an easy one this time)
Mark Boesen wrote:LOL! ...now wait a minute, when was the last time you saw a barn with doors big enough to actually fly threw? A Jenny or Standards wingspan is probably 35’+, so tell me how common was this to see, maybe a large hanger…but not a barn!
Mark:
Have you ever considered that a Curtiss JN4 "Jenny" may have has it's wings "clipped" flying through a open barn door? It WAS known to happen and the Jenny was rugged enough to fly out the other side.
Spectating aviation stunts was like watch a NASCAR race today. They are really not very interting until the crashes.
Besides "barnstorming" consider the specator popularity of "wing walking". Planes of the era were prinicipally biplanes which made "wing walking" a natural populular spectator event. "wing Walkers" performed WITHOUT parachutes making their performance even more thrilling to the paying spectator.
Some "wing walkers" came "down to earth" rather abruptly.
SuperDave- Rest In Peace
- Posts : 3552
Join date : 2011-08-13
Location : Washington (state)
Re: Triva Time II (an easy one this time)
Also remember that these surplus Jennys were selling for as little as $200.
A Ford model T new was $240 in 1925.
Phil
source:wikipedia
A Ford model T new was $240 in 1925.
Phil
source:wikipedia
pkrankow- Top Poster
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Join date : 2012-10-02
Location : Ohio
Re: Triva Time II (an easy one this time)
Most have probably seen "Jenny in a tree" but for those who have not, not many trees to hit in that field.
crankbndr- Top Poster
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Join date : 2011-12-10
Location : Homestead FL
Re: Triva Time II (an easy one this time)
SuperDave wrote:...Mark Boesen wrote:LOL! ...now wait a minute, when was the last time you saw a barn with doors big enough to actually fly threw? A Jenny or Standards wingspan is probably 35’+, so tell me how common was this to see, maybe a large hanger…but not a barn!
Have you ever considered that a Curtiss JN4 "Jenny" may have has it's wings "clipped" flying through a open barn door? It WAS known to happen and the Jenny was rugged enough to fly out the other side.
...
Makes that horrible Atari game seem even more ridiculous.
Phil
pkrankow- Top Poster
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Re: Triva Time II (an easy one this time)
Phil:
I don't "do" video games, reality is plenty entertaining for me.
To each his own.
I don't "do" video games, reality is plenty entertaining for me.
To each his own.
SuperDave- Rest In Peace
- Posts : 3552
Join date : 2011-08-13
Location : Washington (state)
Re: Triva Time II (an easy one this time)
SuperDave wrote:Phil:
I don't "do" video games, reality is plenty entertaining for me.
To each his own.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barnstorming_%28video_game%29
I was a whole lot younger at the time, and video games were a whole lot more simple. There is a pretty good and accurate YouTube video review, but I won't link because of the language used.
Phil
pkrankow- Top Poster
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Re: Triva Time II (an easy one this time)
pkrankow wrote:Also remember that these surplus Jennys were selling for as little as $200.
A Ford model T new was $240 in 1925.
Phil
source:wikipedia
The reason surplused Jenney's were inexpensive wasbecause America had just completed "The Great War", fought "The war to end all wars" and "Made the World Safe for Democacy".
The "Roaring Twenties" (The Jazz Age") was a time of frivolity and isolationism as America withdrew unto itself. Warren G. Harding successfully campaigned with the slogan "Return to Normalcy" and was elected President in 1920.
source: my fertile mind not yet fossilized.
See if you can recognize a pattern emerging.
SuperDave- Rest In Peace
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Join date : 2011-08-13
Location : Washington (state)
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