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High Performance Parkzone T-28 Trojan Parkflyer RC Plane Flight with Funny Landing
This video shows my buddy Shawn flying his high performance Parkzone T-28 Trojan Parkflyer RC Plane with Air Force colors taking off, performing stunts and tricks, and landing on a paved runway with a fun little ending. In addition to doing stunts, rolls, and tricks with the North American T-28 Trojan RC Plane replica, he also did some very fast low passes right over my head!
This RC Plane Park Flyer is brought to us by RC juggernaut Horizon Hobby. This is also considered by many to be the single best Parkflyer they have ever released under their Parkzone brand. This version is a United States Navy paint scheme that looks very pretty in my opinion on this T-28D warbird.
Also, this isn't the PNP (Plug-N-Play) RC model like I normally fly and I use an AR600 receiver in. This PZ T-28 Parkflyer is the BNF version.
This one is a cool RC Model airplane in a line-up of other cool planes including WWII Warbirds such as the P-47 Thunderbolt, F4F Wildcat, F4U Corsair, P-47 Lightning, Supermarine Spitfire, BF-109, FW-190, and P-51 Mustang Parkzone Warbirds. Hopefully they will add in a P-40 Warhawk, P-38 Lightning, or a Japanese Mitsubishi Zero Fighter in the near future.
This is considered to be a pretty good 4-channel trainer airplane much like the 3-channel Hobbyzone Champ. Another trainer with a cool factor could be the Hobbyzone Corsair. I am curious to see how it helps out noob pilots do their thing.
If you can master a plane like this, then the E-flite UMX B-17 is something that is well within your reach as an intermediate UMX RC Plane.
Here is some history on this Navy Trainer plane via Wikipedia:
Operational History
After becoming adopted as a primary trainer by the USAF, the United States Navy and Marine Corps adopted it as well. Although the Air Force phased out the aircraft out of primary pilot training by the early 1960s when jets like the F-86 and FJ-2 Fury became mainstays in the US Military, continuing use only for limited training of special operations aircrews and for primary training of select foreign military personnel, the aircraft continued to be used as a primary trainer by the Navy (and by default, the Marine Corps and Coast Guard) well into the early 1980s.
The largest single concentration of this aircraft was employed by the U.S. Navy at NAS Whiting Field in Milton, Florida, in the training of student naval aviators. The T-28's service career in the U.S. military ended with the completion of the phase in of the T-34C turboprop trainer. The last U.S. Navy training squadron to fly the T-28 was VT-27, based at NAS Corpus Christi, Texas, flying the last T-28 training flight in early 1984. The last T-28 in the Training Command, BuNo 137796, departed for Naval District Washington on 14 March 1984 to be displayed permanently at Naval Support Facility Anacostia, D.C.[3] Many T-28s were subsequently sold to private civil operators, and due to their reasonable operating costs are often found flying as warbirds today.
Vietnam War
In 1963, a Laotian Air Force T-28 piloted by Lieutenant Chert Saibory, a Thai national, defected to North Vietnam. Saibory was immediately imprisoned and his aircraft was impounded. Within six months the T-28 was refurbished and commissioned into the North Vietnamese Air Force as its first fighter aircraft.[5]
T-28s were supplied to the South Vietnamese Air Force in support of ARVN ground operations, seeing extensive service during the Vietnam War in VNAF hands, as well as the Secret War in Laos. A T-28 Trojan was the first US fixed wing attack aircraft (non-transport type) lost in South Vietnam, during the Vietnam War. Capt. Robert L. Simpson, USAF, Detachment 2A, lst Air Commando Group, and Lt. Hoa, SVNAF, were shot down by ground fire on August 28, 1962 while flying Close Air Support (CAS). Neither crewman survived. The USAF lost 23 T-28s to all causes during the war, with the last two losses occurring in 1968.[6]
Other Uses
T-28s were also used by the CIA in the former Belgian Congo during the 1960s.[7] France used locally re-manufactured Trojans for close support missions in Algeria.[8] The Philippines utilized T-28s (colloquially known as "Tora-toras") during the 1989 Philippine coup attempt, the aircraft were often deployed as dive bombers by rebel forces.
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