Last Meteor.
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Discussion

grumpy52

Original Poster:

5,973 posts

190 months

Wednesday 9th January 2019
quotequote all
It popped up on a forces page yesterday that the last airworthy Meteor in the UK has retired.
It will be joining the fleet at Bruntingthorpe and will be maintained in running condition and used for fast taxying runs .
I found it amazing that one was still in use .

FourWheelDrift

91,927 posts

308 months

Wednesday 9th January 2019
quotequote all
https://www.forces.net/news/bittersweet-last-airwo...
"The last airworthy Gloster Meteor of its kind"

As in night fighter variant. I think the two converted T7s at Martin Baker are still flying.

aeropilot

39,799 posts

251 months

Wednesday 9th January 2019
quotequote all
grumpy52 said:
It popped up on a forces page yesterday that the last airworthy Meteor in the UK has retired.
It will be joining the fleet at Bruntingthorpe and will be maintained in running condition and used for fast taxying runs .
I found it amazing that one was still in use .
It's the ex-Classic Flight NF.11, which has been up for sale for some time, but not found a buyer (unsurprising in the post-Shoreham situation in the UK) and It's not really being retired from anything, as it was a pure airshow performer, so not sure why they think it is, and it's not the last airworthy Meteor in the UK either (as Martin Baker still have their two examples)
It's the last purely civilian owned example since the export of the airworthy T.7 to the USA a year or so ago, which is probably what they mean, in a confused way rolleyes





Edited by aeropilot on Wednesday 9th January 12:13

Dr Jekyll

23,820 posts

285 months

Wednesday 9th January 2019
quotequote all
aeropilot said:
It's the ex-Classic Flight NF.11, which has been up for sale for some time, but not found a buyer (unsurprising in the post-Shoreham situation in the UK) and It's not really being retired from anything, as it was a pure airshow performer, so not sure why they think it is, and it's not the last airworthy Meteor in the UK either (as Martin Baker still have their two examples)
It's the last purely civilian owned example since the export of the airworthy T.7 to the USA a year or so ago, which is probably what they mean, in a confused way rolleyes
It's been retired from flying.

Eric Mc

124,944 posts

289 months

Wednesday 9th January 2019
quotequote all
There are two Meteors still airworthy in the UK.

FourWheelDrift

91,927 posts

308 months

Friday 25th January 2019
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The arrival into Bruntingthorpe - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVElytMOQsg

Spot the errors.

Eric Mc

124,944 posts

289 months

Friday 25th January 2019
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They showed some film of the E28/39.

ChemicalChaos

10,707 posts

184 months

Sunday 27th January 2019
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Without wanting to say too much on here, there is a lot more to this than being reported, such as ongoing ownership disputes, broken verbal agreements, and a barn full of airworthy spares that would keep it flying for years.
It may yet not be the end of flying for this particular aircraft, watch this space.

Riley Blue

22,969 posts

250 months

Sunday 27th January 2019
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I lived at Lyneham in the late 1950s when a great many Meteors arrived at 33MU, sadly many for disposal. I really hope it is able to continue flying, it was easily 'star of the day' for me at the Yorkshire Air Show in 2015