Chino warbirds saturate the senses

A Curtiss P-40K Warhawk in Alaska markings roared aloft at Chino, tucking its main gear as the wheels twisted 90 degrees to lay flat in the wings. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)

By Frederick A. Johnsen

Wave after wave of warbirds roared over the Chino Airport in California April 29 through May 1 in three days of commemorative flights that saturated the air with the sounds of radial and inline engines and the silhouettes of classic warplanes from another era.

Put on annually by the Planes of Fame Air Museum, a pioneering flying air museum, the event at Chino is logistically logical – Chino is home to numerous warbird restoration shops and museums, including the patriarch Planes of Fame.

Harry Geier, Planes of Fame’s marketing and development director, said 32,500 people attended this year’s air show and about 40 warbirds flew each day.

G22 Two North American Aviation company products, a P-51 Mustang fighter and B-25 Mitchell bomber, passed on either side of a slack windsock at Chino on Saturday. Air show layout had warbirds taxiing past the crowd line, providing many photo opportunities. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)

Two North American Aviation company products, a P-51 Mustang fighter and B-25 Mitchell bomber, passed on either side of a slack windsock at Chino on Saturday. (Photos by Frederick A. Johnsen)

The attraction of this air show is a combination of the amazing warbirds located on the Chino airport, as well as others that flew in from as far away as Idaho and Texas to participate.

The Friday evening show included a cameo set of fly-bys by the Planes of Fame Boeing P-26, a pre-war open cockpit monoplane fighter that is the last flying example.

Bookending that performance on Sunday was a hop by the museum’s Northrop N9M flying wing test aircraft, a yellow-and-blue wooden wonder that is also the last of its type flying.

Sleek profile of a wooden Northrop N9M flying wing stands as a tribute to Northrop's lifelong quest to minimize drag in his designs. This wing flew on Sunday at the Chino show. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)

Sleek profile of a wooden Northrop N9M flying wing stands as a tribute to Northrop’s lifelong quest to minimize drag in his designs. This wing flew on Sunday at the Chino show.

The experience of warbird air shows is more than visual. The sound of military aircraft engines firing up is a wheezy, throaty, crackling, popping sequence that gives way to a thunderous beat that makes even taxiing seem impatient.

It’s a sound that a whole squadron of general aviation airplanes can’t match. But then, one could probably feed a whole squadron of GA planes on the budget of one warbird.

Sunset haze backlights a row of North American P-51 Mustangs followed by an AT-6 Texan trainer, part of the assemblage of more than 50 warbirds at the 2016 Planes of Fame air show at Chino, Calif. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)

Sunset haze backlights a row of North American P-51 Mustangs followed by an AT-6 Texan trainer, part of the assemblage of more than 50 warbirds at the show.

Two angled flightline ramps at Chino intersect where a VIP tent is moored. Each ramp features rows of warbirds parked in a way intended to give visitors a clear look at the warplanes that won World War II and came out ahead over Korea.

As navy fighters and torpedo bombers taxied out for flight, the crowd was treated to the spectacle of folded wings mechanically unfurling to make the machines ready for the air.

The Mustang story is told succinctly in this formation of an early P-51A and a late production P-51D at Chino. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)

The Mustang story is told succinctly in this formation of an early P-51A and a late production P-51D at Chino.

The sights and sounds of warbirds in action went on for hours every day. Many Mustangs, considered the best American fighter of the war, flew at different times of day.

A highlight was the appearance of Planes of Fame’s scarce early model P-51A, powered by an Allison engine instead of the later Merlin powerplant that took Mustangs over Berlin.

Other rare birds in flight included the museum’s P-38 Lightning and P-47 Thunderbolt, plus scarcities like an F6F-5 Hellcat, SBD Dauntless and P-63 Kingcobra.

Scarce Bell P-63 Kingcobra parked on the main fighter flightline, where angled placement of warbirds gives photographers and spectators a clear view. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)

Scarce Bell P-63 Kingcobra parked on the main fighter flightline, where angled placement of warbirds gives photographers and spectators a clear view.

The 75th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor brought out two restored Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighters. One, operated by Planes of Fame, is the last Zero still powered by its wartime Japanese Sakae engine instead of a compatible radial of different manufacture.

This year's Chino event marked the 75th aniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. In the flying show were two original Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighters from the war, emblazoned with bright red Japanese insignia. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)

This year’s event marked the 75th aniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. In the flying show were two original Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighters from the war, emblazoned with bright red Japanese insignia.

Though this was a banner year for the fighters, bombardment aviation was represented by B-25 Mitchells, including the locally-based Pacific Princess flown by Carl Scholl and Tony Ritzman, plus Mitchells from Planes of Fame and Texas Flying Legends.

Tim Savage’s Midwest-based A-26 Invader, sporting new nose guns, also flew during the show. And the world’s only flying PB4Y-2 Privateer patrol bomber dropped in from Arizona for static display.

The crowd was treated to a rare sight when five Curtiss P-40 Warhawks flew formation over the field.

Through a shimmering haze, three classic Curtiss P-40 Warhawk World War II fighters joined up with a current USAF F-16 jet over Chino on Saturday in a Heritage Flight that was a hit of the show. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)

Through a shimmering haze, three classic Curtiss P-40 Warhawk World War II fighters joined up with a current USAF F-16 jet over Chino in a Heritage Flight that was a hit of the show.

Three P-40s, including a pair from the Warhawk Air Museum of Nampa, Idaho, joined a U.S. Air Force F-16 for a heritage flight.

Planes of Fame again hosted a number of aviation veterans, including an unavoidably dwindling group of World War II veterans who were honored for their service. Geier said he was aware of about 10 Second World War veterans in attendance.

F-16 Fighting Falcon wowed the crowd al lthree days with afterburner blazing, to a cacophonous symphony of car alarm horns sounding in the parking lot. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)

F-16 Fighting Falcon wowed the crowd all three days with afterburner blazing, to a cacophonous symphony of car alarm horns sounding in the parking lot.

The show was an ongoing salute to veterans, a flying sensory overload, and a remarkable review of fabulous warbird restorations.

It is easy to see why the Planes of Fame air show has become an anchor event in the warbird air show season.

Not all fliers at Chino were warbirds. This striking 1929 Travel Air D4D was part of an evening air cavalcade Friday night. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
It's all teeth and beaks as a trio of aggressive P-40 Warhawk fighters makes a point on the Chino flightline. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
Olive drab C-47 transport taxied past a slack windsock at Chino on Friday before the show. Humped 'doghouse' tailgunner's position on B-25J in the foreground adds angles to that bomber's unusual geometry. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
Wouldn't be a warbird show without nose art -- Blondie decorates a P-51D Mustang fighter. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
Kent Pietsch parked his 1942 Interstate Cadet atop a pickup truck rolling down the Chino runway past parked P-51 Mustangs. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
Bell Aircraft's efforts at streamlining were not wasted on the bullet-nosed P-63 Kingcobra, shown to good effect at Chino. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
The Pilatus P-2 trainer shown at Chino dates back to 1945. It left Swiss service in 1981. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
A World War II Douglas C-47 transport like those used in the invasions at Sicily, Normandy, Southern France and other key battles settled for a landing at Chino, bracketed by American flags and shimmering in the heat reflected off the tarmac. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
A Curtiss P-40K Warhawk in Alaska markings roared aloft at Chino, tucking its main gear as the wheels twisted 90 degrees to lay flat in the wings. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
F-86 and MiG-15 from Planes of Fame museum flew formation during Korean War segment of the show on April 30, 2016 under steely gray skies. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
As a black-capped spectator looks on, Sean Tucker slices a ribbon with his Oracle biplane as he whips past a sharkmouthed P-40 Warhawk at the Planes of Fame air show in Chino, Calif. on April 30, 2016. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
First public flight demonstration of the Mooney M10T was at Chino during the April 30 show. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
The melee over Pearl Harbor was represented at Chino by several aircraft including the Planes of Fame's original Zero, foreground, rushing past the museum's replica Aichi Val dive bomber. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
Three World War II Curtiss P-40s held a stirring commemorative heritage formation over Chino airport Saturday with a USAF F-16 Fighting Falcon. (Photo by Frederick A. Johnsen)
Source: http://generalaviationnews.comChino warbirds saturate the senses

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