November 28, 2006

Signed, sealed, and delivered

A photo of George Guerra (Global Hawk program director) presenting Lt. General Deptula (a senior USAF official) with a signed cutaway drawing of the Global Hawk RQ-4 Block 20 at the Air Force Association exhibit in September. Check out the cutaway on our website



October 13, 2006

Hello and welcome.... again

Welcome to the new 'improved' Flight Global Archive page. With the success of the


Archive's first outing into the big wide world, we have improved the 'behind the


scenes' structure of the web page to cater for more frequent image and caption


updates.


 


I would personally like to thank the many people who have sent me emails over


the past few months. All have been positive and I am now glad that through this


new version of the web page I can act upon the extra caption information that many


of you have submitted.


 


I would like to especially thank correspondence from the following, Dennis Loep,


Michael Lypka, John Price, John Falk (who noticed his grandfather, Bill Thorn, in one


of the images!), Steve Drurey, 'Neil', Mark Price and Danny Hilven.


 


We are also endeavouring to answer the many requests for images with a series of


new images due to be uploaded shortly. As this is still a part time labour of love, I hope


you will bear with us in both answering your emails and getting the pictures uploaded.


 


Keith's skill in bringing some of the poorer quality images up to a standard for use and


display never fails to amaze me. You would be surprised at how many images have


been restored, making one seamless image from two halves of a glass plate! 


 


As for my role, I aim to illuminate the captions with a bit of historical significance,


whether it be a personality or aircraft. But, with this new web page, I hope to rid myself


of the trauma that has been the naming of a 'Vickers Victor'.


 


Thanks for bearing with us, they say great things don't come easily, so please enjoy


the site and come back regularly to see the new images. 


 

August 23, 2006

NEW! Modern Airliner pictures now added.

 


As part of the ongoing development of the Flight Archive Project we have added a new category of picture New Airliners 2006 . A recent survey showed a demand for this subject, so we have prepared and posted a selection of pictures taken in 2006. These hopefully show a cross- section of typical airliners that reflect the travels of Flight staff so far this year!


  


As this is just a test of demand at the moment, the captions will have to follow soon, but most of these pictures will be fairly self-explanatory, and hopefully enjoyable to look at, Many reflect our location in central England, with local airports, like Birmingham featuring strongly. Also represented are Heathrow, Luton, Manchester, and on a wider field, Madrid, Paris and Berlin.


  


 If demand and feed-back from these pictures is strong, then we can soon post more, and we can spread back through the years, showing airliner history that will eventually join up with the early archive material.


 


It is also hoped that this site will eventually be able to accept pictures sent by yourselves, we do not want the site to be just for us to show our pictures, but to become a show-case for all people interested in aviation to share their memories.

August 16, 2006

Flight Magazine: New Year's Day, 1910. What happened next?

For those of you who have looked at our sample pages of the New Year's Day 1910 edition of Flight Magazine, you may like to know how Mr A.V. Roe got on with his 'Friday' flight which was caught by the Flight photographer and published on the bottom of page 4.


Unfortunately, this was the result!


Alliot Verdon Roe was greatly handicapped in his experiments by lack of funds, which resulted in lack of power for his triplane. He persevered and became one of the most powerful influences in British aviation.


I wonder which of these two photographs would be chosen for publication in this day and age?


 

July 31, 2006

Cutaways at Farnborough

Well, Farnborough has once again come and gone and just like Christmas, you wait all year for it to arrive and then it's over in a couple of days. While it already seems like a distant memory or something I watched on TV, the show was a classic one, with the UK flying debuts for the Airbus 380, Bell Boeing MV-22B and static debut for the Sino Swearingen SJ30-2, all of which we have produced cutaways for over the last 12 months.


 


As mentioned, the work up to our record breaking four colour cutaways in Flight International over the show has been a difficult task, especially coupled with the launch of the cutaways archive. Despite this 4th July issue carried the Northrop Grumman Global Hawk Block 20 cutaway, 11th July carried the Boeing KC-767A, 18th July carried the Embraer 195 and 25th July carried the Bell Boeing MV-22B Block B. All of which can now be seen on the "Posters" section of the cutaway archive, take a look.


Embraer-photo-Farnb-06.jpg


 


As part of our typical marketing and PR agreement with the manufacturers, we offer the added bonus of having the cutaway artists at the show to sign cutaway poster at their stands, chalets and static aircraft. This has always been a good PR exercise and a real crowd puller as it offers both the general public and company guests the chance to get a personalised gift to remember the airshow. This Farnborough was no exception and I ended up doing 3 signings sessions and one corporate hand-over for the show daily.


MV-22B-Queue!-2006-1.jpg



 


On the Tuesday Murdo Morrison (the Editor of Flight international), together with Robert Hancock (Vice-president North and South America sales) and myself handed over a framed and signed poster to the President of Embraer, Mauricio Botelho (centre). See page 2 of the Flight Daily News. These corporate presentations are always fun to do as you know that the cutaways will end up hanging in important offices or front-office locations at company headquarters, which certainly helps with Flight branding.


MV-22B-FarnB-2006-2.jpg


 


Also on the Tuesday I was signing cutaways for guests and dignitaries at the Bell Boeing chalet (due to the 38C heat) and met the USMC officer in charge of the entire project. Over the hour and half sitting I personalised around 50 posters for the program and engineering teams. It's always a pleasure to hear "I have your earlier cutaway in my office and use it all the time" or "I make these parts on the aircraft, its nice to see you got it in."




 


 On Wednesday, because of the heat again, I signed for a similar time in the Northrop Grumman centre, boy was I glad of the air conditioning! Once again it was a pleasure to do the signings, as all of the PR representatives guided their guests and customers through my position.


MV-22B-FarnB-2006-3.jpg



 


 On Thursday the temperature had dropped and I finally got to sign alongside the MV-22B on the static park. This was a great hour and with a little encouragement the two attending VMX-22 (Operations and Test Evaluation Squadron) Marine pilots were roped in to signing posters as well! The crowds grew quickly and at one point a queue formed, how British!



 


The show was also the point at which we (the Flightglobal editorial and ad team) narrowed down our shortlist of cutaways for 2007-2008. Several are already locked into place, but the others will be solidified over the next few weeks. For me attending the shows allows me to meet face to face with the right people at the chosen companies and start the cutaway process moving along.


 


Sometimes this process may take 18 months to come to fruition and for others it is like visiting old friends or family.


 


The show also allows me to look for unlicensed use of the cutaways, of which there were three cases at this show. These will be followed up in due course!


 


I will report on our planned list in another blog.


Click here to see the cutaway page.


 

July 26, 2006

Praise from Seattle

It's sometimes difficult to know how any enhancements we make to the website will go down with readers or users. So it was nice today, when the editor of Flight International , Murdo Morrison, received the following email:

Dear Mr. Morrison,

I want to thank you for putting Flight's collection of photos, cutaways and other material online.  It is a fine service to aviation in all its guises from the most serious professionals to casual enthusiasts.  I subscribed to Both Flight and Av Week for most of my professional career and had occasion to contact your photo archivist, I believe I recall her name was Anne Tilbury, some time in the sixties.  She was most helpful to me in finding a photo I needed for a presentation I was doing for Boeing.

Thank you again good sir and kudos to the whole Flight staff.

Cheers, 

Jim Schubert
Seattle

Nice to know that opening up our picture archive is appeciated - it makes Martin and Keith's hard work really worthwhile. Thanks Mr Schubert!

I never knew there was so much to it!

Hi, and welcome to the Flight Archive. I thought I would share with you some of the thoughts that have passed through the 'old grey cells' whilst working with the images of the Flight archive.

On the first occasion of visiting the archive, I knew I had to look up as a personal priority, a specific series of images that I knew had been published in various books and credited to Flight. This was a set of photos taken at Duxford of 601 Squadron Bell P-39 Airacobras.


 


I used the in-house catalogue and was soon reaching for the box holding the images. Opening the box, I found the glass plates wrapped in translucent sleeves and then, wearing cotton gloves I gently removed the glass plate and there it was, the original image of the line up of Airacobras. Many more images were found than I had previously seen. It was then I realised the value of what was held here. The published photographs were merely the 'tip of the iceberg'. It was obvious really, only the best pictures for the purpose of the article would be published, and that was after any military censorship. Many more images showed invaluable detail that at the time seemed mundane or not dramatic, but they yielded detail to me I had only dreamt of. 


 


As a long term project, I have been researching a local airfield to my home, RAF Lichfield, in Staffordshire. Two of the based units were 51 and 82 MU (Maintenance Unit), and they handled RAF Airacobras after their short service life. Various leads from books and magazine articles gave me tantalising leads and through my own research at the National Archive at Kew, using the units Operational Record Book (ORB) and pilots logs, I started to get a picture of Lichfield's part of this 'Lend - Lease' aircraft's short service career.


 


The published photos had been well 'pawed over' by me when researching this type in RAF service, their service histories, codes and names carried and eventual fate. With only four aircraft modified for operational service, 601 Squadron flew only four missions in three days in October 1941, amounting to a total of nine sorties. Their sole impact being shooting up a few barges across the Channel. Yet, here we were being told in these very images that these 'numerous' aircraft were an extremely potent weapon. The official reason for the withdrawal of the type in December 1941 was given as difficulties with the compass, armament and an extremely high unserviceability rate.


 


I hope that through the thousands of images we can bring to you, together with details giving specific information like date, location, personalities names etc. from the original entry in the Image Catalogue, then even more information can be forthcoming via this open forum. The captions from the magazine at the time of publication could never portray the significance that an aircraft or personality went on to accomplish, or for that matter, how they failed to live up to the expectations expressed at the time of print. With your help, this forum could help put a balanced appreciation of the subjects recorded in images held in the Flight Archive.


 

July 22, 2006

Experimental types

Good news - the experimental and prototype picture collection is now live here. Let us know what you think of the pictures.

July 20, 2006

Updated pages now live

We have just released an update version of the picture archive and cutaways gallery pages. If you click on the "Image Archive" logo on the right hand side you will now be taken back to the main page. Click on the "Flight" logo on the left and you will be taken back to the home page of Flight Global. We also now have captions on many of the pictures (take a look at this example). There will be more enhancements over the coming days and weeks, and, of course, more content. So please keep coming back, and do let us have any suggestions.  

Joe's Intro

joesvisit

Hello world and welcome to the first of my cutaway blogs! As you may have already seen we have just launched the cutaway section of the Flightglobal.com archives project, if you have not seen it, then please feel free to visit at:

Cutaways

This cutaway section will slowly grow over the coming months to include almost all of the cutaways produced by Flight International, allow you to search the database for specific cutaways and to possible purchase them for either private use (screen savers or prints), right through to industrial, marketing and publishing purposes.

This is a mammoth undertaking for the department and one that has been on the cards for some time, but we have finally got there despite the heavy Farnborough workload during the first half of 2006. This month alone we will publish four cutaways over the RIAT and Farnborough airshows, a record-breaking run for Flight, with the 4th July Global Hawk, 11th July Boeing KC-767A, 18th July Embraer 195 and 25th July Bell Boeing MV-22B!

These Blogs will hopefully keep you informed of Flight's cutaway schedule, allow you to meet my team and also let you peak into the world of the Flight cutaway. We have many interesting cutaways and related projects in the pipeline at the moment, including at least three more planned for the later half of the year, including the Gulfstream G150 and Cessna Mustang for the NBAA show.

Attached is a photo of me on my visit to Cessna's Independence facility in April to inspect the Mustang (3rd prototype) for the planned cutaway in October.

In the meantime, we will continue to add to and perfect the cutaway site and hopefully answer some of your question.