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43 aircraft successfully finish Air Race India 2003
Nagpur, Nov 22: Small children waved Tricolours and the Air Force band played a colourful note to accord a warm welcome to forty-three aircraft, from Cessna to Chetak choppers, which touched down at Sonegaon Airport here today after successfully completing the last leg of Air Race India 2003.
Nagpur, Nov 22: Small children waved Tricolours and
the Air Force band played a colourful note to accord a warm
welcome to forty-three aircraft, from Cessna to Chetak
choppers, which touched down at Sonegaon Airport here today
after successfully completing the last leg of Air Race India
2003.
Flying criss-cross, 51 aircraft were flagged off
simultaneously on Thursday from Barrackpore in the east,
Bangalore in the south and Goa in the west to mark the
centenary of powered flight under the aegis of Aeronautical
Society of India.
The race was held to mark the world's first ever famous flight by Wright brothers in 1903 who took to air in their 'Wright Flyer' in Kittyhawk in US.
Senior officers of Indian Air Force and a contingent of mediapersons were also at the tarmac of technical area of air force at the airport to receive the fliers.
Seven aircraft failed to take off from their respective airbases while one of the civilian planes dropped out of the race at Trichi due to a technical snag, an IAF spokesman, co-ordinating the event, told reporters.
Most of the aircraft sailed through, without any major problem, mid-air and maintained the cruise speed, according to their aircraft and fuel capacities. There were three women co- pilots besides two girls from NCC air wing from Bangalore and Belgaum respectively.
But the cynosure of all eyes was a diminutive, Audrey Maben, who took off on a solo flight on her X-Air-F type aircraft from Bangalore and touched the city airport safely. Basically a glider pilot, Audrey has 120 hours of flying experience.
Bureau Report
The race was held to mark the world's first ever famous flight by Wright brothers in 1903 who took to air in their 'Wright Flyer' in Kittyhawk in US.
Senior officers of Indian Air Force and a contingent of mediapersons were also at the tarmac of technical area of air force at the airport to receive the fliers.
Seven aircraft failed to take off from their respective airbases while one of the civilian planes dropped out of the race at Trichi due to a technical snag, an IAF spokesman, co-ordinating the event, told reporters.
Most of the aircraft sailed through, without any major problem, mid-air and maintained the cruise speed, according to their aircraft and fuel capacities. There were three women co- pilots besides two girls from NCC air wing from Bangalore and Belgaum respectively.
But the cynosure of all eyes was a diminutive, Audrey Maben, who took off on a solo flight on her X-Air-F type aircraft from Bangalore and touched the city airport safely. Basically a glider pilot, Audrey has 120 hours of flying experience.
Bureau Report