Following on from the recent posts on a "Very different aircraft at Wellington" and "Also at Wellington"
Allister Jenks sent in the following.
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Following on from the recent posts on a "Very different aircraft at Wellington" and "Also at Wellington"
Allister Jenks sent in the following.
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Onto Wanaka and High Country Helicopters' R44 ZK-HCR2 was in for maintenance. This is also a UK import arriving in 2009, and was acquired by High Country in 2019.
The Minaret Station Kawasaki Hughes 369HS ZK-HMW4 carries Alpine Helicopters titling. This was originally imported from the Philippines in 2002 as ZK-IAC2, becoming HMW in late 2020.
And Wanaka Helicopters' AS350B2 ZK-HCP5 is now all white being acquired by the company in 2021 from The Helicopter Line. This was originally imported from the USA in 2014 as ZK-HSO4.
Returning from a spray job was Helicopters Otago Bell 206B ZK-HWI2 which has been owned by the company since import from the US in 2002
Near Riversdale at the High Country Helicopters base was the Bell 206B ZK-HQR which was added to their fleet this month. This was originally imported from the Philippines in 1984.
And at a very wet Queenstown AS350B2 ZK-HYA3 has been returned to Heliworks after completion of its lease to Fiordland Helicopters. This was originally imported new as ZK-HQG3 in 2009.
As well as the Gannet there was also a Royal Navy Wessex helicopter from the HMS Eagle on the Western apron at Wellington airport 51 years ago:
Tim Gorman's photo of the Airbus A400M at Wellington recently provides a great segue into a series of old photos of another British military aircraft that I scanned recently, also taken on the Western apron of Wellington airport, only metres away from where the A400M was, but 51 years ago!
The Royal Navy Fairey Gannet COD4 model XM430 was most likely from 849 Squadron from the aircraft carrier HMS Eagle which visited Wellington around that time. The COD model was for Carrier on Deck and was used for ferrying VIP passengers and freight to and from carriers (which seems an inefficient way of transporting what must have been a small number of VIPs). XM430 was delivered to the Royal Navy on 22/9/56 and was broken up at Lossiemouth on 19/11/76. It is photo'd above before start up where you can see its two contra rotating propellers. What a spectacular aircraft!Not our usual NZ Civair post but pretty interesting nevertheless. Tim Gorman was at Wellington last Thursday to catch the arrival of an RAF Airbus A400M Atlas. The aircraft called in en route from Fiji to Canberra and only stayed on the ground for about an hour.
A400M Atlas ZM418 taxies in to the Western apron at Wellington. What a spectacular aircraft with its 8 bladed props and refuelling probe out the front. The RAF has 21 of these aircraft on strength.The Godfather of this blog, MRC was back in New Zealand for a fleeting visit home last week. And amongst his photos was this nice looking gold AS 350 B2 at Franz Josef:
The historic WACO UOC Custom ZK-AEL (c/n 4336) has recently returned to the register on 8/9/22 after a many years restoration by Jay McIntyre of JEM Aviation and Rex Newman. It has recently been rolled out and looks amazing!
The aircraft was originally registered to the Marlborough Aero Club in May 1936 and was their flagship until WW II when it was impressed into the RNZAF as NZ575. After the war it was registered as ZK-ALA and was cancelled as Withdrawn From Use in 1958. The Waco was then transported to Australia but never flew there and languished in storage until it was returned to Omaka as a basket case 50 years later.Up the road at Dannevirke airfield Brian Comerford's AS350B2 ZK-IDJ3 was parked up. This was imported from the US in 2021.
And the Heliworx Aotearoa AS350B2 ZK-IQG has now acquired the company's logo and titling. This was imported from Canada in 2014 and acquired by the company in January 2022.
From an identification request - see the final photo below - we have established that the aircraft in question is the Cessna 172B ZK-RWC as seen at Ardmore recently by Ian Bevins.
A quick history of this airframe runs something like this :-
Cessna 172B c/n 48207.
This was one of just shy of 1000 B models built in the 1961 US fiscal year.
During this time period Cessna/FAA allocated a block of registrations to a production run of airframes and conveniently the last two numbers of the airframe c/n coincided with the last two numbers of the allocated US civil registration.
In this case we have c/n 48207 with the registration of N7707X.
If the aircraft was sold to a foreign country whilst still on the production line then the airframe invariably adopted the Cessna test registration of N11B for its test flights - with the initial US registration not being taken up.
So we have
The 2 seat Ultrasport 555T turbine helicopter was developed from the piston engined Sportscopter 600 and is the brainchild of Dick Sybrandy who is based at Manaia in Taranaki. In my previous post on Sportscopters of New Zealand I mentioned that Dick Sybrandy acquired the Sportscopter 600 ZK-HJY2 after it was cancelled from the register on 9/10/00. He formed Ultrasport Helicopters NZ Ltd in September 2010 and I understand from Dick that ZK-HJY2 was developed into the Ultrasport 555T turbine helicopter and it formed the basis of the second Ultrasport 555T ZK-ITK. Then Dick Sybrandy formed a new company Auroa Helicopters and I understand he is still working on helicopter development.
The Ultrasport 555T helicopter is of steel tube and composite construction and is powered by a Solar T62-32 turbine engine of 160 HP which gives a respectable cruise speed of 150km/hr (81 knots). Its has an empty weight of 310 Kg (683 pounds) and a MAUW of 600 Kg (1,320 pounds).
We have had four Ultrasport 555T helicopters registered in New Zealand to date, as follows:
The first Ultrasport 555T was ZK-HEH4 (c/n UH 001) which was registered to Dick Sybrandy of Manaia on 23/7/10. It suffered damage on 17/11/10 at Kapuni when it lost power on takeoff due to fuel contamination but it was repaired. It was cancelled on 20/8/15 as exported.Also in the Rotor Force fleet is the AS350B-3 ZK-IOX which was imported from Canada for them back in 2020.
In a post on American Sportscopters that I did yesterday I mentioned that Trevor Rogers was also involved in an unmanned combat helicopter called the Snark. It is not civil and it never flew but here is a photo of it for the record:
At Pukaki on the 12th the Walter powered Fletcher FU24-950 ZK-DJE c/n 176 was earning its keep.
At Heli Maintenance, Christchurch, on the 17th, I finally caught the Aerocopter AK1-3M ZK-HKH4 c/n 0092 in the air.