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Post by kiwithrottlejockey on Oct 3, 2017 12:21:14 GMT 12
WOW....I've actually seen that photograph gallery at Radio NZ before, but I didn't realise it was still online. Actually, if you CLICK HERE you can listen to the original programme segment which was broadcast on Afternoons with Jesse Mulligan on 29th June 2015. And THIS PHOTOGRAPH brings back memories. That is the combined Newmans Coachlines/NAC depot in Railway Road, Hastings. It opened in the early 1960s when Newmans moved out of the Hawke's Bay Motor Company depot in Russell Street into their own brand-new premises. At about the same time, the old Hastings Railway Station across the road from the Hawke's Bay Motor Company depot was replaced with a new one in Caroline Road a few hundred metres further north along the railway line from the old station. In the next block north along Russell Street from the railway station and Hawke's Bay Motor Company was Dalgety's where in the window displays of the travel agency section, they always had huge models of NAC, TEAL, QANTAS and BOAC airliners. I've often what became of all of those travel agency models of airliners.
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Post by gyrocaptain on Oct 14, 2017 13:47:07 GMT 12
My sole experience of NAC was as a nipper when we were on hols in 1976. In November 1976 to be precise, about a week after Guy Fawkes night. A 737 from Christchurch to Wellington. I remember the pilot telling us that the control radar at Wellington was down which didn't help my mother's (who is not the best flier in the world) nerves much! The take off from Christchurch seemed to take forever before we eventually ambled into the sky. Did they do flex temp or de-rated take offs in those days? The landing at Wellington was a bit bouncy too. Huge fun for a nine year old! (Not for my mother though!)
Were all the NAC 737s painted up in the 'Wings of the Nation' colours by then? (I've got a 1/400 collection of passenger aircraft which includes custom 737s in both the 'National Airways' delivery scheme and the 'Wings of the Nation' livery, I'm wondering which I should display in the 'I've flown on that' case?)
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Post by kiwithrottlejockey on Nov 6, 2017 11:55:57 GMT 12
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Post by Dave Homewood on Dec 30, 2017 23:15:34 GMT 12
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Post by Dave Homewood on Sept 15, 2018 20:31:36 GMT 12
The fans of National Airways Corporation of New Zealand need to check this out, I recorded a superb talk last night given by the Rev. Richard Waugh on the history of NAC. You can listen to the podcast or watch the video, or both. www.cambridgeairforce.org.nz/WONZShow/2018/09/nac/
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Post by Dave Homewood on Jan 25, 2024 10:37:33 GMT 12
From The Press, 29th of September 1975.
Last of the Viscounts farewelled
What is probably the last scheduled flight in the world by one of the most successful aircraft ever built, the Vickers Viscount, ended when the aircraft touched down at Christchurch Airport yesterday at 5.45 pm.
ZK-BWO, better known as “City of Dunedin,” has been sold to a firm of aircraft brokers in Sydney, and will probably serve the rest of its flying life in the East. Its selling price was less than 5 per cent of its original cost of almost £600,000.
N.A.C. is thought to be the last airline to use Viscounts on regular flights.
Among the guests and usual passengers for the last flight were three of the corporation’s former senior pilots, Captains H. G. Walker, G. Harvey, and C. H. Register, the delivery crew for the first of N.A.C.’s Viscounts, Mr T. R. Pike, of the Civil Aviation Division of the Ministry of Transport, who also travelled on its delivery flight, and Mr J. Mathison, a former Minister of Civil Aviation, who officially welcomed the crew and aircraft when it arrived in New Zealand on January 10. 1958.
Many people will remember the Viscount with affection, as a smooth, reliable and safe aircraft. N.A.C. has owned five Viscounts during the 17 years and eight months the aircraft has been in use. They have carried 6.02m passengers, on 134,450 scheduled and charter flights, and in 168,620 revenue-flying hours the aircraft used 234m litres (51.4 m gallons) of fuel, and flew 55.9 m kilometres (34.7 m miles).
The “City of Dunedin” was one of a third series of Viscount aircraft. In 1945 the Vickers Armstrong design staff began work on a medium-range airliner, using the latest method of propulsion, the propeller-turbine engine, which gave speed, economy, efficiency and ease of maintenance. ZK-BWO was built in Britain and bought by N.A.C. on May 20, 1961. It arrived in New Zealand on July 28, and began its regular service the next month. It was the fourth of the five Viscounts.
When the Viscount 807 series was introduced it was one of the fastest airliners of its type. It had a cruising speed of 528km/h (328 m.p.h.) and a top speed of 620 km/h (385 m.p.h.), carried 62 passengers, two pilots and two hostesses, at an all-up weight of 29,364 kg (64,600 lb) using 1492 litres of fuel (328 gallons) an hour. The four Rolls Royce turbo-propeller Dart 510 engines each developed 1600 shaft horsepower.
“City of Dunedin” was an expensive buy, Mr Mathison recalled. The first had cost about £320,000, but, to produce the fourth one for N.A.C., Vickers had had to retool, which almost doubled the price. Vickers had offered N.A.C. two “at a special discount price,” but the corporation had not been able to afford the other aircraft, and later bought one from a Polish group, the finance for this coming from Japan.
When the National Government of the time made the decision to buy Viscounts, it was clearly the best aircraft of its day, and not the difficult decision that the later choice of the Fokker was. Captain Walker had completed the technical training for Viscounts before he visited the Vickers factory, where he accompanied the test pilot on the proving flights for the first Viscount -—the “City of Wellington.” Captain Harvey spent six months in Australia with T.A.A. to gain experience with the aircraft. Both had the highest regard for the aircraft, which, they said, was “most docile.”
Captain B. D. Dunn commanded the last flight. He said that all of the Viscount captains had requested yesterday’s duty, and he had been lucky to be chosen. On Monday week he would begin training for the Boeing service.
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