Control Line: Navy Carrier

OCTOBER's mystery airplane was a one-of-a-kind level bomber manufactured in 1932 by Consolidated and based on their Fleetster civil transport. Modifications included bomb bay doors, a hatch aft of the wing for the gunner, and flotation gear under the wings. However, the Navy found little utility in carrier-based level bombers, preferring the accuracy and penetration achievable with dive bombers for attacking surface ships. As a result, the Consolidated XBY-1 (Bu. No. 8921) never advanced past the testing stage.

Control Line: Navy Carrier

THE UNIDENTIFIED CARRIER AIRCRAFT in my January column was an unsuccessful competitor against the Fairey Gannet anti-submarine aircraft of the British Royal Navy. The Blackburn Y.A.5 shared a common awkwardness of form with the Gannet, almost as if the specification to which they were built required it. The particular variant illustrated was the first of four configurations. With a modified vertical stabilizer and rudder, it became the Y.A.7. The outer wing panels were modified and swept back and a third crew member position added on the second prototype, the Y.A.8.

Control Line: Navy Carrier

THE RULES CYCLE is beginning again. Its first major event is the submission of proposed changes, which must be accomplished before September 1, 1984. Many proposals result from new ideas which have found local acceptance either as a common practice in running AMA events, or as a new event flown at local contests as an additional event. In many cases, these proposals are defeated on the initial ballot, not because they lack merit, but because there is no experience with the proposed change outside of the area in which it originated and there is no real opportunity to discuss the change adequately in the short time before the initial CLCB ballot.

Control Line: Navy Carrier

MYSTERY AIRCRAFT. Congratulations to David Broude, who was selected as winner from among the many who correctly identified the Arado Ar-96 that appeared in the March issue. This month's mystery aircraft should provide a little more challenge-good luck. The aircraft in the May issue was the prototype of a dive bomber which saw service with the U.S. Navy as the Buccaneer and with the Fleet Air Arm (British Royal Navy) as the Bermuda. Designed in the mid-1930s from the XSBA-1 (produced by the Naval Aircraft Factory as the SBN-1), the Brewster XSB2A-1 was larger and was to have a power-operated turret for self-defense, though that feature was not carried over to the production aircraft.

Control Line: Navy Carrier

THE WINNER of the Mystery Plane contest for the May issue was Bob Colton. Bob was selected from the eight readers who correctly identified the Brewster XSB2A-1 Buccaneer. Bob sent along a copy of an article covering the full range of Brewster bombers as described in my last column. Bob has a slight advantage over most of us in identifying planes of the 1930s and 1940s-he taught aircraft identification in the military during World War II. The good proportions of the Buccaneer haven't gone unnoticed. Tom Schaefer, a top Carrier competitor from New Jersey, has built and flown two. His accounts of them describe 350/365-point capability in Class I using an HP .40 on suction with a Perry carb.

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