Log in
Search
Latest topics
» Purchased the last of any bult engines from Ken Enyaby getback Today at 7:24 am
» My N-1R build log
by rsv1cox Today at 7:05 am
» Funny what you find when you go looking
by rsv1cox Yesterday at 3:21 pm
» Landing-gear tips
by 1975 control line guy Yesterday at 8:17 am
» Cox NaBOO - Just in time for Halloween
by rsv1cox Tue Nov 19, 2024 6:35 pm
» Canada Post strike - We are still shipping :)
by Cox International Tue Nov 19, 2024 12:01 pm
» Duende V model from RC Model magazine 1983.
by getback Tue Nov 19, 2024 6:08 am
» My current avatar photo
by roddie Mon Nov 18, 2024 9:05 pm
» My latest doodle...
by TD ABUSER Mon Nov 18, 2024 11:30 am
» Brushless motors?
by rsv1cox Sun Nov 17, 2024 6:40 pm
» Free Flight Radio Assist
by rdw777 Sun Nov 17, 2024 6:03 pm
» Tribute Shoestring build
by amurphy6812 Sun Nov 17, 2024 5:43 pm
Cox Engine of The Month
Made me chuckle.
Page 1 of 1
Re: Made me chuckle.
nitroairplane wrote:
I saw that a few months ago, that guy is an incredible pilot!
Re: Made me chuckle.
The plane is being flown by Kyle Franklin. Kyle and his wife, Amanda Younkin, were owners of Franklin's Flying Circus, a professional airshow act. Both Kyle and Amanda were raised on the airshow circuit and their fathers had been lifelong friends and performers. Jimmy Franklin and Bobby Younkin were killed in a midair during one of their airshows in 2005.
Kyle and Amanda had a wingwalking show call Pirated Skies where she performed while he flew. In early March of this year, at the first show of the season, they had an engine failure at low altitude while Amanda was still on the wing. Although Kyle put the plane down, Amanda was trapped and severly burned in the ensuing fire. She passed away from her injuries near the end of May, 2011. She was 25.
I've seen them perform several times -- he was an excellent pilot, but a heavy Waco flying low and slow without power is just not very controllable.
http://www.franklinairshow.com/
andrew
Kyle and Amanda had a wingwalking show call Pirated Skies where she performed while he flew. In early March of this year, at the first show of the season, they had an engine failure at low altitude while Amanda was still on the wing. Although Kyle put the plane down, Amanda was trapped and severly burned in the ensuing fire. She passed away from her injuries near the end of May, 2011. She was 25.
I've seen them perform several times -- he was an excellent pilot, but a heavy Waco flying low and slow without power is just not very controllable.
http://www.franklinairshow.com/
andrew
Re: Made me chuckle.
Yes, that vid has been around for quite awhile now.
The deja vu is a happly reminder of the "Cubbie's" forgiving nature.
The deja vu is a happly reminder of the "Cubbie's" forgiving nature.
SuperDave- Rest In Peace
- Posts : 3552
Join date : 2011-08-13
Location : Washington (state)
Re: Made me chuckle.
andrew wrote:The plane is being flown by Kyle Franklin. Kyle and his wife, Amanda Younkin, were owners of Franklin's Flying Circus, a professional airshow act. Both Kyle and Amanda were raised on the airshow circuit and their fathers had been lifelong friends and performers. Jimmy Franklin and Bobby Younkin were killed in a midair during one of their airshows in 2005.
Kyle and Amanda had a wingwalking show call Pirated Skies where she performed while he flew. In early March of this year, at the first show of the season, they had an engine failure at low altitude while Amanda was still on the wing. Although Kyle put the plane down, Amanda was trapped and severly burned in the ensuing fire. She passed away from her injuries near the end of May, 2011. She was 25.
I've seen them perform several times -- he was an excellent pilot, but a heavy Waco flying low and slow without power is just not very controllable.
http://www.franklinairshow.com/
That is sad.
andrew
Re: Made me chuckle.
nitroairplane wrote:andrew wrote:The plane is being flown by Kyle Franklin. Kyle and his wife, Amanda Younkin, were owners of Franklin's Flying Circus, a professional airshow act. Both Kyle and Amanda were raised on the airshow circuit and their fathers had been lifelong friends and performers. Jimmy Franklin and Bobby Younkin were killed in a midair during one of their airshows in 2005.
Kyle and Amanda had a wingwalking show call Pirated Skies where she performed while he flew. In early March of this year, at the first show of the season, they had an engine failure at low altitude while Amanda was still on the wing. Although Kyle put the plane down, Amanda was trapped and severly burned in the ensuing fire. She passed away from her injuries near the end of May, 2011. She was 25.
I've seen them perform several times -- he was an excellent pilot, but a heavy Waco flying low and slow without power is just not very controllable.
http://www.franklinairshow.com/
That is sad.
andrew
It was a tragic, heart-breaking accident. They were here for our airshow last year...two of the classiest people you could ever hope to meet.
Kim- Top Poster
-
Posts : 8625
Join date : 2011-09-06
Location : South East Missouri
Re: Made me chuckle.
HaHaHa, love the rudder wiggles. A phenom pilot, those don't come along very often. That tail wheel strut was taking a BEATING during those tip dragger taxi's.
Sad to hear of the loss tho', would have been great to see the Pirate Skies show.
Sad to hear of the loss tho', would have been great to see the Pirate Skies show.
PV Pilot- High Tech Balsa Basher
- Posts : 1854
Join date : 2011-08-11
Age : 57
Location : The ragged end of the Universe.
Re: Made me chuckle.
Kim wrote:nitroairplane wrote:andrew wrote:The plane is being flown by Kyle Franklin. Kyle and his wife, Amanda Younkin, were owners of Franklin's Flying Circus, a professional airshow act. Both Kyle and Amanda were raised on the airshow circuit and their fathers had been lifelong friends and performers. Jimmy Franklin and Bobby Younkin were killed in a midair during one of their airshows in 2005.
Kyle and Amanda had a wingwalking show call Pirated Skies where she performed while he flew. In early March of this year, at the first show of the season, they had an engine failure at low altitude while Amanda was still on the wing. Although Kyle put the plane down, Amanda was trapped and severly burned in the ensuing fire. She passed away from her injuries near the end of May, 2011. She was 25.
I've seen them perform several times -- he was an excellent pilot, but a heavy Waco flying low and slow without power is just not very controllable.
http://www.franklinairshow.com/
That is sad.
that is a nice picture there you must have that on a wall.
andrew
It was a tragic, heart-breaking accident. They were here for our airshow last year...two of the classiest people you could ever hope to meet.
Re: Made me chuckle.
holy cow that was awesome! they staged it really well, i had no idea if that really was just a drunk idiot in a super cub or a professional stunt pilot...but these poor wing tips...my oh my...
GermanBeez- Platinum Member
- Posts : 1167
Join date : 2011-06-15
Location : Bavaria, Germany
Re: Made me chuckle.
"Out of Control" Champs, Cubs, and T-Crafts have been entertaining folks for decades!
One year, we had an act at Cape that involved a fellow flying a "Radio-Controlled" Taylorcraft. The "Pilot" walked out to the full-sized plane carrying his "transmitter", a giant box, supported by straps around his shoulders, sporting various knobs, lights, and antennas. He was stopped by the airshow announcer, who challenged the safety of his big model airplane. Outraged at the "insult" to his model plane, he pulled a "volunteer" from the crowd to ride as a passenger in his model...to prove his confidence in his creation.
The hesitant passenger was loaded into the plane with complicated instructions of what NOT to touch (the airshow announcer was there with his microphone to allow everyone to hear). Of course, everything goes just fine...the T-Craft taxies out to the runway, and turns into the wind with the pilot standing in front of the crowd, giving "commands" with his large, light-blinking "transmitter".
Suddenly, a great puff of smoke shoots from the transmitter, the T-Craft goes to full power, and the wild flying routine begins! Eventually "regaining control", the T-Craft is returned to the ramp, where upon the "passenger" bails from the still-rolling plane and sets about assaulting the "Pilot". Great, clean fun !
Stanley Seggala, performed a similar, long-standing show at Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome...the theme being an innocent farmer who finds himself alone at the controls of an "Out-Of-Control" Cub.
ALL of these demonstrations showcase the good nature of the planes, and the true stick-and-rudder skills of their pilots.
One year, we had an act at Cape that involved a fellow flying a "Radio-Controlled" Taylorcraft. The "Pilot" walked out to the full-sized plane carrying his "transmitter", a giant box, supported by straps around his shoulders, sporting various knobs, lights, and antennas. He was stopped by the airshow announcer, who challenged the safety of his big model airplane. Outraged at the "insult" to his model plane, he pulled a "volunteer" from the crowd to ride as a passenger in his model...to prove his confidence in his creation.
The hesitant passenger was loaded into the plane with complicated instructions of what NOT to touch (the airshow announcer was there with his microphone to allow everyone to hear). Of course, everything goes just fine...the T-Craft taxies out to the runway, and turns into the wind with the pilot standing in front of the crowd, giving "commands" with his large, light-blinking "transmitter".
Suddenly, a great puff of smoke shoots from the transmitter, the T-Craft goes to full power, and the wild flying routine begins! Eventually "regaining control", the T-Craft is returned to the ramp, where upon the "passenger" bails from the still-rolling plane and sets about assaulting the "Pilot". Great, clean fun !
Stanley Seggala, performed a similar, long-standing show at Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome...the theme being an innocent farmer who finds himself alone at the controls of an "Out-Of-Control" Cub.
ALL of these demonstrations showcase the good nature of the planes, and the true stick-and-rudder skills of their pilots.
Kim- Top Poster
-
Posts : 8625
Join date : 2011-09-06
Location : South East Missouri
Re: Made me chuckle.
Kim wrote:"Out of Control" Champs, Cubs, and T-Crafts have been entertaining folks for decades!
One year, we had an act at Cape that involved a fellow flying a "Radio-Controlled" Taylorcraft. The "Pilot" walked out to the full-sized plane carrying his "transmitter", a giant box, supported by straps around his shoulders, sporting various knobs, lights, and antennas. He was stopped by the airshow announcer, who challenged the safety of his big model airplane. Outraged at the "insult" to his model plane, he pulled a "volunteer" from the crowd to ride as a passenger in his model...to prove his confidence in his creation.
The hesitant passenger was loaded into the plane with complicated instructions of what NOT to touch (the airshow announcer was there with his microphone to allow everyone to hear). Of course, everything goes just fine...the T-Craft taxies out to the runway, and turns into the wind with the pilot standing in front of the crowd, giving "commands" with his large, light-blinking "transmitter".
Suddenly, a great puff of smoke shoots from the transmitter, the T-Craft goes to full power, and the wild flying routine begins! Eventually "regaining control", the T-Craft is returned to the ramp, where upon the "passenger" bails from the still-rolling plane and sets about assaulting the "Pilot". Great, clean fun !
Stanley Seggala, performed a similar, long-standing show at Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome...the theme being an innocent farmer who finds himself alone at the controls of an "Out-Of-Control" Cub.
ALL of these demonstrations showcase the good nature of the planes, and the true stick-and-rudder skills of their pilots.
that sounds like a great one.
i think ill entertaind doinf#g a "drunked display" after a party and pretend im actually drunk.
Of cousre with an rc plane
Re: Made me chuckle.
Saw an interview with Kyle where he said the wingtip bows were not strengthened, he just had to be very careful when dragging a wing.GermanBeez wrote:holy cow that was awesome! they staged it really well, i had no idea if that really was just a drunk idiot in a super cub or a professional stunt pilot...but these poor wing tips...my oh my...
tubebass- Silver Member
- Posts : 75
Join date : 2011-08-11
Age : 71
Location : Saint John, N.B, Canada
Re: Made me chuckle.
tubebass wrote:Saw an interview with Kyle where he said the wingtip bows were not strengthened, he just had to be very careful when dragging a wing.GermanBeez wrote:holy cow that was awesome! they staged it really well, i had no idea if that really was just a drunk idiot in a super cub or a professional stunt pilot...but these poor wing tips...my oh my...
Wow imagine sneezing at the wrong time while dragging the tip.
Similar topics
» It made me chuckle
» Kim's new RV made me think of him
» Big Box made it.
» On my way! (Made it!)
» The land that made me "me"
» Kim's new RV made me think of him
» Big Box made it.
» On my way! (Made it!)
» The land that made me "me"
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum