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2014-08-07

Lu sur 7s7: Le futur moteur Boeing en partie conçu à Liège



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Le futur moteur Boeing en partie conçu à Liège

© PHOTO_NEWS
La société liégeoise Techspace Aero (Safran) a décroché un partenariat avec General Electric pour le développement du futur moteur du Boeing 777X, a-t-elle annoncé jeudi soir. Le montant du ...
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Lu sur 7s7: Crash d'un avion de tourisme belge



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Crash d'un avion de tourisme belge

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Deux Belges ont perdu la vie, mercredi matin, dans l'accident d'un avion de tourisme à Saint-Jean-les-Deux-Jumeaux, près de Meaux, en Seine-et-Marne (France). L'appareil faisait route de Mandelieu vers Wevelgem.
Trois mineurs ...
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Space : Rosetta images & science

Forwarded message - From: European Space Agency


06-08-2014 06:10 PM CEST


Replay of press conference after Rosetta's arrival at comet 67P/C-G. Includes presentation of latest images and the science to come

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Space : Lu sur 7s7: La Belgique a rendez-vous avec une comète





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La Belgique a rendez-vous avec une comète

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Après un voyage de plus de 10 ans, la sonde européenne Rosetta doit arriver mercredi à destination, à 100 km de la comète 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. A bord, se trouve un instrument qui permet de mesurer la ...
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Britain is back : Mise à flot du HMS Queen Elizabeth

Maybe the most ambitious project of the Royal Navy since the Mary Rose

Photo : Mise à flot du HMS Queen Elizabeth
Le futur porte-avions de la Royal Navy HMS Queen Elizabeth a été mis à flot pour la première fois ce 17 juillet, à peine deux semaines après son baptême officiel....
Clip Better http://www.journal-aviation.com/actualites/27441-ph…







2014-08-04

Les Zeppelins à Cognelée près de Namur en Belgique



» Blog Archive » Les Zeppelins à Cognelée près de Namur en Belgique
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[Friends of the League of WWI Aviation Historians] Monday 3 August 1914: the first war flights were...



Walter Pieters
Walter Pieters 10:51pm Aug 3
Monday 3 August 1914: the first war flights were carried out by the Belgian Air Service, but also the first loss of aircraft. Lieutenants Jaumotte & Bussy were caught in a stormon returning from their reconnaissance flight towards the Luxemburg border. The engine fell silent approaching Laroche,
where Jaumotte crashed. Both men were slightly injured, but unconscious. Wearing leather clothing & no insignias, local people took them for Germans. It was then that Jaumotte regained consciousness & in a real Walloon dialect saved him & his observer.
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Drone

The use of drone in Belgium is still subject to legal discussions.
Here is a good example of the practical use of such aerial vehicules.


Fly'n Flash.com
Fly'n Flash Belgium - aérial imagery by drône
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A true aircraft rarity Focke Wulf 200 restoration

A very ambitious project at the limit of what is possible but the dream is going on


A true aircraft rarity
In 1937, Focke-Wulf aircraft works in Bremen presented to the world the most modern high-capacity airliner of the day.
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http://dlbs.de/en/Projects/Focke-Wulf-Condor/index.…












[vintage-and-warbirds] Canada's last airworthy Lancaster to leave for U.K. tour

Forwarded message - From: Jeff Rankin-Lowe siriusproductions



 
Canada's last airworthy Lancaster to leave for U.K. tour
Vintage plane to join only other operational bomber of its kind for six-week trip

CBC News

Aug 03, 2014

Canada's last airworthy Avro Lancaster bomber is set to embark on one of the most eagerly anticipated journeys of its post-service history.

On Monday morning, the Second World War-era flyer will take off from its home at the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum in Hamilton, Ont., for the first leg of its trip to England.

Once there, it will embark on a six-week tour of the United Kingdom with the only other airworthy bomber of its kind, a Lancaster belonging to Britain's Royal Air Force.

Over the 1.5-month jaunt, millions are expected to turn out to see the twin Lancasters in action.

"We've been working really hard on this, but everyone is just thrilled," Al Mickeloff, marketing manager for the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum, told CBC Hamilton.

Crews at the museum, he said, have fitted the Canadian Lancaster with new tires and propellers and updated the plane's radio systems to make sure they comply with British standards. They also "double- and triple-checked" the airplane's mechanical systems and took it for a final test flight this week.

"It's running fantastic," Mickeloff said.

After debuting in 1941, the Avro Lancaster became one of the most famous aircraft associated with the Second World War. A total of more than 7,000 of the bombers were assembled at facilities in the U.K. and Canada. And tens of thousands of British and Canadian airmen served on Lancasters during the Allies' European campaign.

Some of the bombers remained in active service for more than a decade after the war. The Royal Canadian Air Force decommissioned the last of its Lancasters in the early 1960s.

The strong sentimental connection between the Lancaster and aging veterans was a big reason organizers wanted to bring the tour to fruition, Mickeloff said.

"Anyone in the bomber command who's left, they're probably in their 90s right now," he said. "We wanted to give them a last chance to salute."

The timing worked well for the Canadians because their Lancaster, Mickeloff added, is in its best shape since the bomber was first restored in 1988. Last year, the plane underwent a $500,000 engine overhaul.

The Lancaster is scheduled to take off from the museum, located at Hamilton International Airport, at 10 a.m. ET on Monday, after a short ceremony. The bomber is slated to make stops in Goose Bay, Nfld. and Iceland before flying into the Royal Air Force base at Coningsby, in eastern England, on Friday.

Eight people, including five crew and two documentary filmmakers, are making the transatlantic trek aboard the 69-year-old bomber.

Three pilots will take turns manning the controls. One of them — Don Schofield, the museum's chief Lancaster pilot — has logged more than 750 hours of flight time in bombers of this kind.

Rounding out the passenger list is Matthew Munson, a 34-year-old British entrepreneur who bid $79,000 on eBay for the opportunity to secure his seat on the trip. The museum held the auction to raise money to put towards the estimated $750,000 cost of taking the Lancaster on tour, Mickeloff said.

Additional financial support has bubbled up in the form of a sponsorship deal with U.K. brewer Thwaite's. ("Lancaster Bomber" is the name of one of the company's signature brews.)

British media have written extensively about the Lancaster tour. Mickeloff predicts the coverage will yield large crowds at every stop. 

A successful air show in Canada, he noted, attracts between 30,000 and 40,000 people. Similar events in Britain yield more than one million attendees, he said.

"The anticipation of seeing these two together is incredible. All you need to do is go on social media to see the enthusiasm level," said Mickeloff. "It's great exposure for our museum, for Canada, for Hamilton."

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Also see http://tinyurl.com/pvohaq5 for photo galleries and additional links.

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Posted by: Jeff Rankin-Lowe