VLOG: Janet, the Amazing Fairey Gannet!

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As an enthusiastic avgeek, in the back of my mind has always loomed the desire to make the ultimate pilgrimage to aviation’s Mecca, that aeronautical Disneyland called the EAA Airventure, better known to the aviation community simply as, “Oshkosh.”
Well, I am proud to say that, this year, I made it. For eight fabulous, fun-filled and exhausting days, my friends and I ogled, gawked, oohed and ahhed at some of the world’s most amazing aircraft, met history-making, legendary pilots, and witnessed no less than ten mind-boggling air shows.

In short, I was in avgeek heaven.

Not worthy!

Perhaps the biggest challenge of Oshkosh is deciding just what to check out. There is simply too much for any one enthusiast to see, even in eight days. Like any diligent pilot, you plan ahead. You do your homework, read the programs, map out your flight plan, circle the must-sees, and boldly launch into the unknown.

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Upon walking through the hallowed gates, however, your flight plan derails. Like the veritable kid in a candy store, you gleefully sprint from one airplane exhibit to the next, barely taking a breath. Before you know it, six hours have passed, and you collapse, exhausted, onto the grass of the front lines of the air show. For the next three hours, you watch in shock and awe as those fantastic toys that you gleefully snapped photos of all day long are put through the paces by the world’s finest airmen.

I meet the LEGENDARY BOB HOOVER!

I meet the LEGENDARY BOB HOOVER!

Just as all the other avgeek gawkers, my brain was overloaded by all the fantastic avgeekery. Every plane you see, and every pilot you meet, have a story to tell. Some planes are homebuilts, some are warbirds, some commercial airliners, some are active military. But every single plane—and every single pilot—tells a story. But there are a few that stand out, and one in particular that simply grabbed me and wouldn’t let go.

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This is the story of the British warbird nicknamed “Janet,” the world’s first dual-control prototype XT752 Fairey Gannet. While the single control version came out a year earlier, Janet herself is now the world’s last flying Fairey Gannet and T5 model (First Royal Navy designation: WN365; later changed to XT752.)

 

Manufactured 1954 by the Fairey Corporation and named after one of the world’s fastest sea birds known for its dive-bombing skills on unsuspecting fish, XT752 herself is a wonder to behold. Tasked as a sub-hunter and Electronic Warning bird during the cold war, Janet began life as the T.2 trainer prototype, and later rebuilt by the factory as the first T.5 type. She bounced around in ownership between the British Royal Navy, the Indonesian Navy and the Fairey Corporation, finally ending service as the world’s last Gannet to land aboard an aircraft carrier, the Ark Royal, in 1978. In August, the old gal turned 60.

Designed to nest aboard older British aircraft carriers, Janet sports several ingenious design features. At first glance, she looks like a beefed-up singe-engine warbird, like a Thunderbolt on steroids, with Corsair wings. But everything about Janet’s looks are deceiving, beginning with the engine systems themselves. Through a planetary gear box, twin fuselage-mounted Mamba turbine engines power two nose-mounted propeller blades. Sharing a coaxial shaft, the props spin opposite—and completely independent of—each other. Each engine drives its own propeller independently; power cannot be transferred or shared. This allows for one engine/prop combo to be shut down inflight during sub hunts to “loiter” over the search area. In this configuration, the Gannet burns a mere pound of fuel per mile.

Technological wonder number two, the amazing folding wings. Designed for carrier use, the Gannet’s wings fold, not once, but twice, into a Z-pattern.

_Bombay Systems, Operational!

Finally comes the bomb bay. Designed not only to search, but also destroy, submarines, Janet’s armament and payload consist of 16 wing-mounted rockets, flare markers and sonobouys, two 2,000 lb. torpedoes and four 200 lb. nuclear depth charges. Got it? That’s Nuclear depth charges!

As mentioned, the Gannet could also be configured for electronic warfare and early warning detection. While the Gannet never saw combat, history experts generally agree that, had the Gannet not been retired due to short-sighted budget cuts, the Falklands war may have had a very different—and much less disastrous—outcome for Britain.

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Owner Shannan Hendricks purchased the Gannet in 2004, and along with pilot Harry Odone—now the world’s only current, type-rated Fairey Gannet pilot—have refurbished the plane to flying condition. While the Royal Navy’s obsession with paint kept the old gal corrosion-free, stripping away the layers proved a challenge requiring six months and 2.5 tons of soda blasting. A fully restored Janet now sports a shiny new silver-and-orange paint scheme, reflecting her exact Navy colors and markings when she retired in 1978.

Screen Shot 2014-09-04 at 1.44.32 AMBut Janet’s road back to the sky has been a long and winding one. She was nearly sidelined in Goose Bay, Canada when spare parts were stolen, resulting in a legal chase for their recovery. Fortunately, she was rescued by an Antonov 124 and flown to KMSP—a story featured in an episode of National Geographic’s Monster Moves.

 

On August 9, 2013, the newly-restored Janet spread her Z-wings and took to the skies once again.

 

Maiden Voyage of the newly-restored Fairey Gannet

Maiden Voyage of the newly-restored Fairey Gannet

Tech specs aside, there’s simply something about Janet that draws a crowd at every event she graces, a charm that has won over legions of fans, just by her stately presence. Can one fall in love with an airplane? We’ll let you decide for yourself.

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Ladies and gentlemen, from the flight deck, I invite you to sit back relax, and enjoy a flight on the world’s last flying Fairey Gannet.

Direct Link: https://vimeo.com/104783215

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The Restoration of the Janet the Gannet!