View allAll Photos Tagged Docs
There are just two examples flying in the world of both the Lancaster and Superfortress, two of the most important heavy bombers of WW2. Three of the four flew together in a rare formation at EAA AirVenture 2024! The Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum's Avro Lancaster B.X FM213 marked as KB726/V-RA leads Boeing B-29A Superfortresses 44-62070 "FIFI" and 44-69972 "Doc" on an evening flypast over Oshkosh.
All photo rights are owned by Doc's Friends, Inc. and use of the photos on this site for publication must be approved by Doc's Friends, Inc. For more information, contact: www.b-29doc.com/media-contact/
Pequenina de uma comunidade caiçara no litoral do Rio de Janeiro, no balcão da lojinha de doces da famÃlia.
That's what a Doc Martens heaven must be like ;-). I you like it too, please fave and/or leave a comment. Thanks! :)
Arrived for my weekly meeting with the bike super geeks, and lo and behold, a Doc Morton, CCM, 1928??? Motor Pacer from Mike Berry's collection just shows up out of the blue.
Certainly, very rare, is there more than one?
Thing might be north of 30 lbs???
Oddly, I'm most curious about the Brooks saddle. Super short, which in track racing today, shortened saddles like this let riders push the UCI rules. Any info about this saddle would be appreciated. Probably modified B17 by the Doc himself.
Thank you.
Just checked, CCM serial # starting with "z" may be 1936.