View allAll Photos Tagged n2s

AeroSuperBatics N5057V/1 Boeing Stearman N2S-1/R985 Kaydet (A75N1) c/n 75-5598 - Day 2 Avalon 2013 Australian International Airshow. File: N5057V_YMAV_20130227_0696

Pearson Air Museum, Vancouver (2004)

United States - West-Coast Tour 2004

 

Stearman PT-13B Kaydet, N57444 as US Navy\812

Former USAAF 40-1609.

 

Photo selection

Stearman - PT-13, PT-17 and N2S Kaydets

Shuttleworth Season Premiere Air Show

Old Warden

1 May 2022

Pushed a bit to get the dark details to show, this represents the Stearman flown by G Bush

 

Sure hope you like my conversion of this DSLR image into a "Kodachrome" image like this was back in World War II, when the Stearman was used as a primary trainer. Now the Stearman flies as a trainer into the grace of flight...

 

Here's one of my photos from the 17 October 2015 HFM Fly Day. Please visit the Flickr album for more photos please at www.flickr.com/photos/avgeekjoe/sets/72157659924144246 . I take and share these photos for your entertainment and hopefully inspiration to attend a future Heritage Flight Museum (HFM) Fly Day...

 

PHOTO CREDIT: Joe A. Kunzler Photo, AvgeekJoe Productions, growlernoise-AT-gmail-DOT-com

The Boeing-Stearman N2S-4 Kaydet is an American trainer introduced in the 1930s. Known in the US Navy as N2S and in the US Army Air Corps and US Air Force as PT-17. Many foreign operators. Popular in the civilian market, where it's also known as Stearman 75 or Boeing-Stearman 75.

 

At Planes of Fame Air Museum, one of two aviation museums at Chino Airport, Chino, California.

Lotnicze Depułtycze 2016

 

[20160611_2225lr]

Modified Stearman taxiing in after a wing-walking performance at an air show at Phoenix Deer Valley Airport in April, 1978.

 

Scanned from a slide.

Always fun to photograph a Stearman, I understand Heritage Flight Museum now has landed as a regular guest star at its fly days this particular Stearman. Sure going to be fun... especially as I have a new Flickr group called Yellow Airplanes.

 

Photo is from the 17 October 2015 HFM Fly Day. Please visit the album for more photos please. I take and share these photos for your entertainment and hopefully inspiration.

 

PHOTO CREDIT: Joe A. Kunzler Photo, AvgeekJoe Productions, growlernoise-AT-gmail-DOT-com

A 1945 built model 75 "Stearman"

Kaydet at the small aerodrome at Hoevenen

C/n 75-4952 built in 1943, to US Navy marked 55715, in 1946 registered N262V, in 2011 LN-FTX. Falsely marked US Army Air Corps PT-17 42-16232 / 262. Performing at Kjeller Air Show 2015 at Kjeller airfield outside Oslo, Norway 31. May 2015.

Matted stereographic projection of this pano.

 

Taken at the Mid-Atlantic Air Museum in Reading, PA.

 

See the interactive version.

Boeing Stearman N2S-3 Kaydet msnA75-2184

Base aérienne Orange Caritat

05/2004

Boeing Stearman PT-17/N2S: The fixed-gear biplane trained more military pilots, including Navy flier George H.W. Bush and the Tuskegee Airmen, than any other basic trainer in World War II.

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The 70th anniversary of Victory in Europe (VE) Day, as part of the Arsenal of Democracy World War II Victory Capitol Flyover; Washington D.C.

EM Air Tours LLC 1936 1942 Stearman (Boeing) N2S-5 Kaydet s/n 75-017, NC56760, 2010 National Radial Engine Exhibition, Akron, CO.

The Stearman model 75, widely known as the Stearman, Boeing Stearman (Stearman became a subsidiary of Boeing in 1934) or Kaydet is a biplane, of which over 10,000 were built in the United States during the 1930s as a military trainer aircraft. It served as the basic trainer for the USAAF (as the Kaydet) and USN (as the N2S) throughout World War II and after the conflict was over, thousands of surplus aircraft were sold on the civil market. In the immediate post-war years they became popular as crop dusters and as sports planes.

PictionID:41005654 - Catalog:BP SDASM_00835 - Title:SDASM Exhibits 1988 Ford Building By Corwin Crowell-------- - Filename:BP SDASM_00835.TIF - - Image from the History of the San Diego Air and Space Museum and Balboa Park Collection. ---Please Tag these images so that the information can be permanently stored with the digital file.---Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum

Breitling Wing Walkers. Wings & Wheels, Dunsfold EGTD. 2014/08/23

AeroSuperBatics N5057V/1 Boeing Stearman N2S-1/R985 Kaydet (A75N1) c/n 75-5598 - Day 2 Avalon 2013 Australian International Airshow. File: N5057V_YMAV_20130227_0838

Right side, Boeing Stearman N2S-3 Kaydet, 07591, Valiant Air Command Warbird Museum, Titusville, Florida, 2016

Not too happy with how the sky turned out but enjoy this attempt at living history photography if you can please.

 

Photo is from the 17 October 2015 HFM Fly Day. Please visit the album for more photos please. I take and share these photos for your entertainment and hopefully inspiration.

 

PHOTO CREDIT: Joe A. Kunzler Photo, AvgeekJoe Productions, growlernoise-AT-gmail-DOT-com

"Spirit of Artemis" lines up for departure, Fairford 14/07/2014

Taken in western Oregon on the way to the Cottage Grove Stearman fly-in. (2004)

N5057V and SE-BOG - Breitling Wingwalkers

 

C/n 75-4952 built in 1943, to US Navy marked 55715, in 1946 registered N262V, in 2011 LN-FTX. Falsely marked US Army Air Corps PT-17 42-16232 / 262. Performing at Kjeller Air Show 2015 at Kjeller airfield outside Oslo, Norway 31. May 2015.

'716' / N1731B

Boeing-Stearman N2S-5 Kaydet

c/n 75-7516

@ Compton Abbas ~ 16.04.2016

'pvt'

Boeing-Stearman N2S Kaydet at the 2010 Cactus Fly-In, Casa Grande, Arizona

In partnership with the Tim Tebow Foundation, Liquid Church hosted Night to Shine, a prom for teens and adults with special needs on February 9th, 2018.

1941 Boeing Stearman A75N1 as Navy N2S-1 at the 2015 Point Mugu Air Show.

Type: Boeing N2S-3 Stearman

c/n: 75-7813

Location: Fairford

Date: 21 July 2013

In the post-World War I boom for cropdusters, war surplus aircraft such as the venerable JR-7 Jenny were in high demand. In 1933, Lloyd Stearman designed a dedicated cropduster and aerobatic aircraft, the Model 70. The aircraft was meant to be easy to fly, robust, and maneuverable. Stearman sold the company soon thereafter, first to United Aircraft (later United Airlines), which in turn sold it to Boeing. The Stearman name remained associated with the aircraft, and subsequent models were often known simply as “Stearmans.”

 

While the Model 70 sold well on the civilian market, its viceless handling characteristics led the US Army Air Corps to purchase it as a primary trainer, designating it PT-13. Production switched to the PT-17 in 1938, which differed from the PT-13 only in that it had a Continental rather than Lycoming engine. The design of the propeller gave the Stearman a distinctive sound no matter what engine it used.

 

With the outbreak of World War II, PT-17s were Lend-Leased to the Royal Canadian Air Force, also as primary trainers, and were nicknamed Kaydet by the Canadians. Once the United States was involved in the war, PT-13s, PT-17s, and Navy N2S “Yellow Peril” trainers were usually the first aircraft a prospective pilot saw, flew in, and soloed in, with the instructor sitting behind the student. They performed quietly and superbly, and eventually over 10,000 were produced in various marks for the Allies, training thousands of pilots (and washing out thousands more) before the trainees moved on to more powerful aircraft, such as the T-6 Texan and AT-11 Kansan.

 

At the end of World War II, with air forces beginning the switch to jets, the Kaydet was seen as no longer necessary and sold off, often at ridiculously low prices, as war surplus. Thousands were bought by private citizens and returned to their original role of cropdusters, or used as aerobatic aircraft, or just used for casual flying. As a result, several hundred still exist today as flyable aircraft. Some militaries continued to use them as trainers well into the modern era: Colombia retired their PT-17s around 2005, while the Mexican Air Force retains four on official strength as demonstration aircraft.

 

Built as a N2S-3 Kaydet for the US Navy in 1944, Bureau Number 38393 was sold as surplus after the war, and was bought up as a cropduster; in 1948, the wartime engine was swapped out for a more powerful Pratt and Whitney R-1340 Wasp. It would go through several owners, first as a cropduster and then as a warbird, and suffered a crash in 1981. Rebuilt, 38393 joined the Palm Springs Air Museum in 2010. It was restored as a prewar US Navy N2S-3, but suffered another crash in 2016; luckily, in both cases, it was not fatal. Rebuilt again, it was repainted in a racing scheme. 38393 is listed as having been sold to a private owner in 2020, but as PSAM is still advertising rides in their Stearman, it's likely that 38393 isn't going anywhere.

 

I'll stop taking pictures of Stearmans when they stop looking so good. We saw this gorgeous aircraft in May 2021.

Markings: U. S. Navy N2S-1

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Continental R-670 (W670) seven-cylinder radial, 220-hp

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Great War Flying Museum air show

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Nikon AF-S Nikkor 70-200mm 1:2.8GII ED SWM VR ED IF

 

_DSC4439 Anx2 1600wh Q90

Boeing N2S-3 Stearman trainer biplane, Pacific Aviation Museum, Pearl Harbor, July 2011

Michael Walsh's 1943 Boeing N2S-3; c/n 75-7721, BuNo 38100, N5114N.

US Civil Registration: N741BJ

  

From Wikipedia:

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing-Stearman_Model_75

 

The Stearman (Boeing) Model 75 is a biplane formerly used as a military trainer aircraft, of which at least 10,626 were built in the United States during the 1930s and 1940s. Stearman Aircraft became a subsidiary of Boeing in 1934. Widely known as the Stearman, Boeing Stearman or Kaydet, it served as a primary trainer for the United States Army Air Forces, the United States Navy (as the NS and N2S), and with the Royal Canadian Air Force as the Kaydet throughout World War II. After the conflict was over, thousands of surplus aircraft were sold on the civilian market. In the immediate postwar years they became popular as crop dusters, sports planes, and for aerobatic and wing walking use in air shows.

 

The Kaydet was a conventional biplane of rugged construction with a large, fixed tailwheel undercarriage, and accommodation for the student and instructor in open cockpits in tandem. The radial engine was usually uncowled, although some Stearman operators choose to cowl the engine, most notably the Red Baron Stearman Squadron.

 

After World War II, thousands of surplus PT-17s were auctioned off to civilians and former military pilots. Many were modified for cropdusting use, with a hopper for pesticide or fertilizer fitted in place of the front cockpit. Additional equipment included pumps, spray bars, and nozzles mounted below the lower wings. A popular approved modification to increase the maximum takeoff weight and climb performance involved fitting a larger Pratt & Whitney R-985 Wasp Junior engine and a constant-speed propeller.

  

Photo by Eric Friedebach

Cavanaugh Flight Museum's Fall Fly Days. Addison, Texas.

Boeing-Stearman N2S Kaydet at the 2010 Cactus Fly-In, Casa Grande, Arizona

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