• Hey Guest!
    British Car Forum has been supporting enthusiasts for over 25 years by providing a great place to share our love for British cars. You can support our efforts by upgrading your membership for less than the dues of most car clubs. There are some perks with a member upgrade!

    **Upgrade Now**
    (PS: Upgraded members don't see this banner, nor will you see the Google ads that appear on the site.)
Tips
Tips

December 17, 1903

John Turney

Yoda
Silver
Country flag
Offline
May be an image of 1 person and outdoors
 
My oldest is one degree of separation from the Right Bros.

When our oldest was 7 to 11 years old we lived at Hill AFB. There were airplanes, mostly F16s, constantly flying overhead. Thus began his fascination with flying, as you might surmise from this grade school artwork:

Shaun Art-5869.jpg


After Hill, we moved to Scott AFB IL where he began flying Microsoft Flight Simulator constantly. He was addicted to it. For his 13th birthday we bought him a ride in a helicopter over St Louis and he was hooked..

helicopter ride.jpg


We eventually moved to New Mexico where he joined the Civil Air Patrol and, at 14, went to a two week CAP glider encampment down in Hobbs, NM where he took glider lessons and solo'd a glider. After the encampment, he was the only one of the group who continued with lessons, eventually earning is Glider License. This is where the Wright Bros connection comes in. It turns out, his instructor was a very old guy named Al Santilli (who also swore him into the Air Force when he commissioned). Anyhow, Al had been flying gliders since he was a young man and, as it turns out, Al's glider license was signed off by Orville Wright.
Shauns Glider.jpg


Al-3.jpg
Al-2-1.jpg


Shaun flew KC-135s in the Air Force (still in Reserves) and now flys 737s for a cargo carrier. From an early age we knew he would end up doing something involving aviation.

f18approach.jpg
 
Very cool connection to some real history your son has Bas.
 
I was behind a camera 70 years after the First Flight to shoot the Commemoration. Hadn't known until going through the museum that they even cast their own engine blocks. Remarkable.
 
I was behind a camera 70 years after the First Flight to shoot the Commemoration. Hadn't known until going through the museum that they even cast their own engine blocks. Remarkable.
That is very cool to be able to attend that commemoration. Bet you have some great pics.
 
We have one of their 1910 engines on display. Apparently the first to have a cast aluminum block. We cranked it up on Dec 17, 2003, for a few demonstrations. No carburetor, no throttle, fuel pump, or spark plugs. Used off-fuselage batteries to get the first spark.

ENGINE_F_Wright_Brothers_Engine.jpg
 
That is very cool to be able to attend that commemoration. Bet you have some great pics.

Unfortunately, I was in uniform and shooting it as a job for the Department of Defense. THEY have some great pictures. :LOL:
 
Unfortunately, I was in uniform and shooting it as a job for the Department of Defense. THEY have some great pictures. :LOL:
Department of Defense? The Wright Flyer does not make a dependable weapons delivery platform. :ROFLMAO:
 
Back
Top