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Sadly I have no further details about this interesting photo.
The craft at the forefront is XW884 CU-41 (cn WA1150) built in 1973 and delivered to the Royal Navy in January of 1974 where she served with 705 squadron. In 2000 she was bought by MW Helicopters who put her on the Swazi reg where she became 3D-HXL, but she was shortly returned to the UK register to fly as G-BZDV which by all counts she is still doing with Dean Gregory.
The Gaz in the background is XW890 CU-53 (cn WA1161) which was also attached to 705 squadron but now serves as a gate guardian outside Gazelle House in Yeovilton and wears an AAC livery.
Gaz Snap
I am offering another 1973 built Navy bird:
SA341C XW861 probably taken around the time of her delivery in 1973
Now there is some confusion surrounding this craft’s construction number as Jos’ list has her as WA1102 becoming G-BZFJ and then UR-ABBA but, the CAA records show G-BZFJ as being cn. WA1098 which equates to G-BBHW on Jos’ list and which is also recorded as WA1098 on the CAA list. So, if you can figure that out – please let me know!
British Army Gazelles to Have Lives Extended Until 2025
The British Army's Westland Gazelle AH.1 observation and utility helicopters are to remain in service for another nine years according to the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD).
This extension will take the Gazelle past its 50th anniversary in UK military service (due to occur in 2021) and will make the type the longest serving active helicopter in UK's rotary-wing inventory.
Details of the extension emerged after the MoD confirmed to Jane's on 22 July that it is to run a new competition for all elements of the helicopter's in-service support in time for new contracts to be in place by March 2018.
The new contracts to keep the veteran helicopters in service will run from 2018 to 2025.
Britain's Army Air Corps Gazelles are set to remain in service until 2025
The AAC currently operates a fleet of 34 Gazelles spread between BATUS flight in Canada supporting the Suffield training site, manned aerial surveillance tasks with 5 Regiment AAC at Aldergrove in Northern Ireland, and special forces support at RAF Odiham in Hampshire. Gazelle training takes place at the Army Aviation Centre at Middle Wallop in Hampshire.
According to data released by the MoD in March, some 15 Gazelle are routinely undergoing maintenance with 19 in daily use.
Depth maintenance support and overhauls are currently provided by Cobham Aviation Services and Airbus Helicopters have a contract to provide post-design services (PDS) and logistic support for the Gazelle. Leonardo Helicopters (formerly AgustaWestland) also provide PDS support for the UK-specific parts of the aircraft and Safran Helicopters provide PDS and logistic support for the Gazelle's turbomeca engine.
Dear Steve, my sincerest condolences upon Nigel's sudden passing. This is one of the sorrows of the aviation community, that those we love are too often taken from us. Please express my sympathies to Nigel's family and friends in their loss.
Russia's East-Siberian Department of Transport Investigation Department has issued a notice identifying a Gazelle helicopter which crashed yesterday near the village of Ust-Uda in the Podvolochnoe District of the Angara region.
Local sources within Russia are identifying the aircraft as RA-2501G which, according to our records, has indeed been operating in the Angara region. The aircraft's pilot and one passenger were injured in the accident about which no further details are available at present.
SA341B RA-2501G as seen at Bratsk Airport, Irkutsk, Oblast, Russia in 2015 (Avia Archives)
The aircraft has been identified as RA-2501G and based on our discussion on page 54 (see link below) I have gone with cn. WA1560 but if (as Steve suggests) GazEn can confirm this, it would be helpful.
>>> http://www.aviafora.com/forums/forum...=4892#post4892
We sent that out a long time ago now but Paramount were having trouble with the South African authorities getting it off the G reg. Since that aircraft we have sent them out still on the UK military reg so they can be more easily registered in SA.
Héli-Union SA341G(S) F-GEHF cn 1320 (Photo: Philippe Boulay)
Héli-Union's F-GEHF (now YU-HEY) as seen 'somewhere' in France. In the absence of a date for this shot I'm going to take a stab in the dark and say that this is 'probably' c.1980.
I won't conceal my 'dismay' at how miserable the Gaz exhaust begins to look when it is 'abandoned'. With less than an hour a week one should be able to keep it in fine fettle - a job some local scouts or CCF would jump at for the occasional fly. When I had my school exeat weekends many of them were spent at Gatwick Airport in the UK cleaning the underside of Ferranti's JetRangers (which the mechanics didn't especially enjoy doing). But, being small and with the use of a trolley board, it was no problem. I still remember 'Wee Johnny' (John Froud) diligently briefing me on steering clear of the antennas!
Now you can't post a shot like this without also offering a close-up of that classic 70's interior!
My 'favourite' aspect of this interior is the 'wood effect' behind the driver's door pocket, oh .. and the curtains of course (plus the pilot and passenger door-mounted ashtrays)! Note the additional space between the rear window (where the curtains are) and the bulkhead behind the rear passenger seating and which is a feature of the stretched Gaz.
In the 70's you could buy a vinyl adhesive roll which was produced in this 'wood effect'. It was quite the rage for a time (especially in the US) .. and was the epitome of tackiness!
This recent photo of a NAF Gaz shows an 'X'-harness arrangement. This is the military equivalent of the bungee-strap arrangement which was used by many cameramen before the advent of bespoke gyro-stabilised helicopter cameras, only that instead of a camera this is used for something else. If you enlarge the photo you can see what that something else is.
In many nations around the globe, helicopters which have been supplied to perform light observation and training roles have been adapted into make-shift fighting craft. Only trouble is .. I don't think the Gaz is so well protected - even against small arms fire.
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Garry Gazellewrote: 843 didn't slide into 348 (note the numbers ) - they were both landing at the refuelling point when their blades contacted. 2 other ac damaged in the same incident, one overtorqued taking avoiding action and another was damaged by flying debris. The fifth ac was undamaged. No serious injuries in the Gazelles but the Norwegian refueller was injured by flying debris but thankfully made a full recovery. I have a post crash photo somewhere with one ac on it's side against the fuel pumps.
Gary, needless to say, the forum would be grateful to see this photo if ever you unearth it!
Q: What's the Connection between Distribution Firm Amazon and the AérospatialeGazelle?
A: N16KH
On the morning of Thursday, March 6, 2003, Jeff Bezos chartered an Aerospatiale Gazelle helicopter in the remote reaches of southwest Texas. He knew the mountainous area from his teenage years, when he spent summers at his grandfather's ranch: At the Lazy G, he castrated and branded cattle, worked on a Caterpillar tractor, and laid pipes. Now he was interested in buying his own ranch.
The Gazelle helicopter flew near Cathedral Mountain, a monumental pile of eroded rock rising sharply from the high plains to a peak of 6,860 feet. The stony soil below was covered by dense forests of live oak, Douglas fir, aspen, maple, ponderosa pine, madrone, Arizona cypress, and juniper. Bezos rode with his executive assistant, Elizabeth Korrell, as the chopper was piloted by a local legend, Charles "Cheater" Bella. The veteran airman had flown in Rambo III, and survived a crash into New Mexico's Organ Mountains. He'd even been hijacked in 1988, when a woman aimed a gun at him and forced him to land in the New Mexico State Penitentiary to break out her inmate husband.
That morning in March 2003, while carrying the richest and arguably most renowned passenger of his long career, Cheater nearly lost control of the Gazelle in the powerful winds. He brought it to a quick landing, but the main rotor sliced into a cedar tree. The airframe split, and the helicopter rolled over and finally settled in the shallow waters of Calamity Creek. The copter was destroyed, but its passengers used their cell phones to call for help, and the U.S. Border Patrol sent a rescue party.
The late Field Marshall Sam Manekshaw is strapped into an Army Air Corps Gazelle at London's Battersea Heliport by Major Scott-Hopkins prior to departing for Sandhurst. Also seen is heliport manager Johnny Johnson, c. 1984
Sadly, they just don't make them like Sam Manekshaw anymore. The Bible-quoting first Field Marshall of India who was the 'hero' of several post-colonial wars in India.
A quintessential soldier, he once told the cadets at the Indian Military Academy, "You will not gain wealth and riches but you will have respect, and most importantly, you will be a soldier in this great Army."
Field Marshal Manekshaw travelled the world, led the Indian Army and witnessed and participated in five major military campaigns. In his retirement he settled in the serene town of Coonoor in the Nilgiri Hills where he lived with his wife Seelu.
As with many who knew him, his personal staff, notably Manbahadur (also ex-Army) and his family, adored Sam.
The military victory in East Pakistan and the creation of Bangladesh were seen as Sam Manekshaw's triumphs as much as then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's, and it was at this time that he could be said to be at the apogee of his fame.
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