I was never into seaplanes. But I'd have to say one of the very few I know ... a PBY Catalina. It saved a lot of lives in WWII and was also quite an anti-sub platform.
I was never into seaplanes. But I'd have to say one of the very few I know ... a [PBY Catalina](http://www.aviation-history.com/consolidated/pby.html). It saved a lot of lives in WWII and was also quite an anti-sub platform.
You were never into seaplanes until you clicked this link:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short_Sunderland
The thing was low, fat, slow, tough as nails, hard to shoot down, and covered in machine guns. The Germans called it The Porcupine. It was that fucking awesome. The range was fantastic, considering the age. They were beasts.
I want one of my very own but that's pretty unrealistic.
You were never into seaplanes until you clicked this link:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short_Sunderland
The thing was low, fat, slow, tough as nails, hard to shoot down, and covered in machine guns. The Germans called it The Porcupine. It was that fucking awesome. The range was fantastic, considering the age. They were beasts.
I want one of my very own but that's pretty unrealistic.
Well you should get one anyway and park it in your garage. We can call ya 'Howard "TheBuddha" Hughes'!
Well you should get one anyway and park it in your garage. We can call ya 'Howard "TheBuddha" Hughes'!
Alright...
What is your favorite seaplane - and why?
Condition: It must meet the definition of seaplane and have been manufactured expressly for that purpose and not a converted plane or a float plane.