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Topics - Blue Monday

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1
Here is a small article on a planned demonstration carried out by Aer Arann on behalf of Britten Norman back in 1977. It looks like they planned to show the BN Maritime Patrol Defender to the IAC. Is there any other info or even photos of this demo?

http://archive.advertiser.ie/pages/preview.php?ref=4494&ext=jpg&k=&search=aer+arann+aer+corps&offset=0&order_by=field51&sort=ASC&archive=0

BM.

2
Air Corps News / Air Corps involvement in HEMS service.
« on: May 23, 2012, 08:19:31 pm »
Here is a pilot project that has just kicked off using an Air Corps EC135 in the EMS role. It seems the ground ambulance will attend the scene first and if the patient is in a critical condition, will call in the air ambulance and meet somewhere along the route towards the hospital.
 
"http://www.rte.ie/news/av/2012/0521/media-3293486.html"]Six One News: Aero-medical helicopter to serve western seaboard - RT News Player
 
"http://galwayindependent.com/stories/item/2381/2012-21/Cautious-welcome-for-air-ambulance-service"]Cautious welcome for air ambulance service - News - Galway Independent

"http://www.waypointmagazine.com/story373"]Pilot aeromedical service for Ireland | Waypoint AirMed and Rescue Magazine
 
It's a step in the right direction and hopefully will lead to a proper air ambulance service here.
 
BM. :ireland:
 
P.S. At about 15:20 today, an IAC EC135 went into University Hospital in Galway. Maybe that's the first "shout" for this new service.

3
Aviation News / RAF Bell Griffin HAR2 in Weston.
« on: March 15, 2012, 03:51:29 pm »
Two interesting visitors were spotted on the ramp at Weston Airport today. It's not often you see the RAF in Weston! I'm open to correction on this but maybe this is the first visit to Weston of an operational foreign military aircraft? ZJ703 is the Griffin in question. The two crews were enjoying a cup of tea together when I went into the restaurant to get that last photo. The Aer Corps often hosted the RAF, Royal Navy and Belgian Air Force on SAR exchange visits so it's good to see the tradition continuing.

 











Apologies for the less-than-stellar photography.

Blue Monday :ireland:.

4
Scale Aircraft Modelling / GASU EC135 in 1/72.
« on: March 11, 2011, 04:58:27 pm »
It looks like the GASU EC135 is now quite a bit easier to build, thanks to this new kit from Revell;

http://www.scale-rotors.com/news-reviews/revell/eurocopter-ec-145-police-gendarmerie-04653

This kit includes an extra sprue that contains the "High-Skids" fitted to the GASU EC135. The only obstacle now is to scratch-build the "tub" under the fuselage. 

BM  :ireland:

5
Irish Aviation History / The Pink Panther and the I.A.C.
« on: January 04, 2011, 03:29:46 pm »
Cartoon-based artwork seems to be a recurring theme when it comes to Irish Air Corps aircraft. The Fairey Battle, SIAI Marchetti and Cessnas all carried artwork based on well-known cartoon characters. The character most associated with the I.A.C. is the Pink Panther. It seems the Pink Panther was adopted by the helicopter crews and stickers and artwork appeared in various forms on the Alouette III and also on Gazelle 241 for the final years of its service. Can anyone detail the history of the connection between the I.A.C. helicopter crews and the Pink Panther? Who was responsible for its adoption as the unofficial mascot of the helicopter squadron and when did it first appear in Baldonnel?

I have heard two stories about how the association started.

The first story claims that Aerospatiale released some promotional literature in 1963 or thereabouts and it featured The Pink Panther. This literature made its way to Baldonnel and because of this, The Pink Panther character was adopted as the unofficial mascot of the helicopter unit within the Irish Air Corps from that time onwards.

The second story states that the arrival of the Alouette III at Baldonnel coincided with the release of the first Pink Panther film and such was the film's popularity that the helicopter crews decided to adopt the pink cat as the unit's mascot.

I don't know which of these stories are true but I'd love to know the full story. Maybe it's a combination of the two. The connection between the I.A.C. Alouette III and its crews and The Pink Panther was obviously quite strong though. After all, A196 nearly flew at Baldonnel on the  21st of September 2007 with a giant Pink Panther figure adorning the length of its tailboom! But that's another story. Hopefully the Pink Panther will reappear on the AW139 or EC135 at some point in the future. Thanks.

BM. :ireland:  


6
Scale Aircraft Modelling / New Hawker Hector kit released.
« on: November 08, 2009, 11:51:43 am »
A-Model have released an injection moulded kit of the Hawker Hector in 1/72 scale. Hannants in the UK are selling it for £15.70 so it's not cheap. It probably requires a bit of work to get a good model from it. I don't think there are any decals for the Hector available, though it wouldn't be too much of a stretch to get suitable roundels from an old Maxdecals sheet. The Hector served for only a few years in Irish service but it is still great to have yet another IAC type in kit form.

 BM.
 :ireland:

7
Here are another group of useful sets from Whirlybits, this time to convert the 1/72 Airfix SA330 Puma into the "J" version used by the IAC in the early eighties. The first set is for the composite main rotor blades that will replace the kit blades. The next one is a small set for the winch. There is one picture on airliners.net that shows this winch fitted to P242 and at least one SAR mission (and probably a good few more) was flown off the west coast that employed the winch. The main conversion set adds all the fuselage details to complete the conversion to "J" standard.



Decals were available from Maxdecals but that sheet is discontinued. Hopefully the markings for Papa 242 will be released again on a revised sheet soon.

 BM.
:ireland:

8
Here is an in-box review of the 1/72 Whirlybits Sikorsky S-61N conversion set. It requires the Revell Germany Sea King kit for the majority of the additional parts. The S-61N has a strong Irish connection. It was first operated in Ireland by Irish Helicopters Ltd to support various off-shore instalations and later in the SAR role. The SAR contract was then taken over by Bond Helicopters (which was later aquired by CHC). The Irish Air Corps also leased a SAR S-61N for a period. Six S-61Ns are currently resident in Ireland on the Coast Guard contract with four manning the bases in Shannon, Dublin, Waterford and Sligo (with two maintenance relief machines). A pair of KLM S-61Ns (leased by Irish Helicopters) also supported the Papal visit in 1979. Decals are available for IAC and Irsh Coast Guard machines from Max Decals.







The Whirlybits conversion set is quite comprehensive and the version I bought was the SAR one (WBA72050), which is based primarily on the SAR machines operated in the past by Bristows. There are plenty of small differences between the Bristow S-61Ns and the CHC SAR S-61Ns used in Ireland. Bristow converted their 61s at their maintenance facilities in the UK while CHC converted theirs to a slightly different specification at its workshop in Stavanger in Norway. Things like winches, FLIR turrets and aerial fits are all different between the two companies as well as the long range fuel tanks fitted internally. The CHC Ireland S-61Ns recently underwent an upgrade which has seen them gain new equipment again. The IAC version is based on the first SAR version fielded by CHC. Even with the differences between the two operators, the conversion set as supplied is a fine basis for any Irish S-61N.   

The conversion set included two fuselage halves in resin, with all doors opened up in their respective fuselage halves. Also supplied in resin are two sets of sponsons (one plain set and one with pop-out floats fitted), bulkhead, two of the doors, the cockpit floor, the front engine housing, a stairs, the tail pylon and tailplane and a set of rotor blades. The rotor blades can be replaced by plastic ones from the Airfix or Fujimi kits. The blades in the Revell kit are the new composite ones while the S-61N has the older metal blades. One bag of white metal parts contains the SAR equipment (FLIR and winch) and aerial fit. The second bag has the radar nose, engine intake guard and additional aerials and sponson supports. A sheet of plastic card is supplied for the cabin floor as is a template to accurately cut it out. A large etched-brass sheet includes the forward sliding door, innstrument panels and various aerials, rotor head and undercarriage leg details and grab handles. Other than the cabin floor, no detail is supplied for the main cabin, so a SAR cabin or passenger cabin will have to be detailed from the spares box or require some scratch building. The decal sheet covers three Bristow machines:

The Bristow Old Scheme; This is for a North Sea Oil Rig "Taxi" used in the seventies and eighties and is probably the paint scheme normally associated with the S-61N in Bristow service.

The Bristow New Scheme; This is again for an oil rig support machine. I think there are still a few S-61Ns in service in this role with Bristow and this is their current scheme.

The MCA Scheme; This is the Bristow SAR scheme many will be familiar with from the various English TV shows highlighting the work of the Coast Guard in the UK. A lot of the stenciling from this scheme also apply to the Irish SAR machines and will supplement the Max Decals markings already available.

This conversion set is not cheap at £36 sterling but it is a very comprehensive set. It is a vast improvemnt over the old Transport Wings conversion set and given that the S-61N is unlikely to ever be produced in plastic by one of the big manufacturers, this is the ultimate S-61N kit that is likely ever to be released and is highly recommended. It would be a very good basis for a superdetailing project. 

BM.
 :ireland:

9
Irish Air Corps / The Irish Air Corps, An Illustrated Guide.
« on: May 28, 2009, 02:10:29 am »
Joe Maxwell and P.J. Cummins released their new book yesterday, 27th of May 2009, at Baldonnel. The Minister for Defense and G.O.C. Ralph James lead proceedings.

The book is an incredible piece of research and sheds new light on the aircraft (and history) of the IAC, especially the earlier types flown. It includes many new photos not previously published. I've only had a chance to flick through the book briefly but it is highly recommended to anyone with even a small interest in the Air Corps. It also includes many colour side profiles that will be of huge interest to the modeller. I don't know how many books are being printed in the first batch but this is one you won't want to miss out on. It's great to see so much being published on the Air Corps in the last 15 years or so. :thumbsup:

 BM.
:ireland:

10
Irish Aviation History / IAC Avro Cadet article in "Aeroplane".
« on: March 20, 2009, 09:37:12 pm »
The April 2009 edition of "Aeroplane" has an article on the Avro Cadet purchased recently by the Air Corps. It has some interesting details on the history of this airframe before it arrived back in Ireland.

BM.  :ireland:

11
Irish Air Corps / AW139 in Mountain Rescue.
« on: February 10, 2009, 10:16:01 pm »
The T.V. and papers are reporting that Air Corps, Coastguard and RAF helicopters all participated in a rescue operation to save two lost climbers from the Wicklow mountains today. One casualty was brought to Tallaght Hospital by AW139 while a second was transported by S-61N. The RAF Sea King brought a Mountain Rescue Team from Wales. The Evening Herald reported that a pair of AW139s dropped a group of Rangers (as many as 50) into the area yesterday to assist in the search. It's good to see the Irish Air Corps still involved in the rescue business.

BM.
 :ireland:

12
Air Corps News / NVG Training for IAC helicopter pilots.
« on: February 05, 2009, 05:49:14 pm »
Here is a link to an interesting little article on current NVG training for helicopter pilots in Bal;

http://www.verticalmag.com/control/news/templates/?a=9881&z=6

Let's hope the credit crunch doesn't reduce hours flown by the IAC in the next few years or all this good training will be for nothing.

BM
 :ireland:

13
Aviation Waffle / USAF helicopters in long-range rescue off west coast.
« on: December 11, 2008, 04:34:05 pm »
Not an Air Corps subject, but apparently a pair of USAF  :unitedstates: HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopters were involved in a long-range rescue of a sailor off the west coast yesterday. They were refuelled in the air by an MC130 Hercules and there was an RAF Nimrod involved as well. The Hercules completed the mission with two engine failures! The sailor was brought to hospital in Limerick. Did anyone get any photos of them at Shannon? Sounds like an interesting mission, to say the least.

Bue Monday.
 :ireland:

P.S. Here is a couple of links to the story;

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/28172475/

http://www.shephard.co.uk/news/1174/pave-hawks-called-in-on-uk-sar-mission/

14
Aviation Photography / SAR Training in Galway Bay, 09/11/2008.
« on: November 12, 2008, 03:52:58 pm »
Sikorsky S-61N EI-SAR was doing some winch training with a RIB in Galway Bay on Sunday and I managed to get a few photos. It made a low pass along the Salthill Promenade at one point and winched three or four times from the RIB before heading back to Shannon.


Here she is starting her low run along the prom.






If you look closely at the winch you can see it has a second, spare, winch clamped on to the body of the first. This is the first time I've seen this on a Coastguard S-61N.


I hit the wrong button on my camera and managed to get a black and white photo. It's a poor shot but you can just see the winchman suspended under the helicopter.

Blue Monday.
 :ireland:

15
Irish Air Corps / Alouette III; First Anniversary of their retirement.
« on: September 21, 2008, 03:42:04 pm »
Today, the 21st of September 2008, marks the first anniversary of the official retirement of the Alouette III helicopter from Irish Air Corps service. It's the one aircraft that single-handedly inspired my life-long interest in aviation and I'm sure inspired plenty of others as well. Probably the most significant aircraft to serve with the IAC, the whine of the Artouste engine is sadly missed and Baldonnel is probably a considerably quieter place now that they're gone. Here is a photo of A196 landing for the final time at Baldonnel last year at the end of the Retirement Flypast.



If you have any photos of the Alouette, recent or historical, please post them to salute this great helicopter. It looks like a buyer has been found for six of the helicopters with A195 being retained for the IAC Museum, possibly in "ground-running condition".

Blue Monday.
 :ireland:

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