A rare 1936 Aeronca LB airplane restored by its local co-owners is being recognized by the vintage aircraft community.
The airplane won Reserve Grand Champion in July at the Experimental Aircraft Association’s annual fly-in event in Oshkosh, Wisc. It will be featured on the cover of the September/October edition of “Vintage Airplane” magazine.
"Along with the full-scale aircraft, the event includes period re-enactors in a war encampment setting; era automobiles on display and participating in a parade, flying exhibitions by WWI radio-controlled aircraft; guest speakers, a collector’s show for WWI items, and merchandise for sale. "
Will you have the chance to go? I'm still not quite up to that yet.
Sorry for the tardy answer to your POV questions. I tossed, literally, all of my GoPro gear several years ago and standardized with Sony POV units. Sony's color science and their internal stabilization blew anything GoPro had at the time. I think the last model I had was a GoPro 3 and I was never very happy with the footage from it. The Sony's are beautiful right out of the box and endured uber G's in the T38 without so much as a hint of rolling shutter.
The RYLO is fun and I have found some pretty cool revenue producing applications for them (I have three now), but it's a specialized tool and wouldn't be useful for your needs. I have no idea what GoPro offers currently because I've quit looking, but I'm guessing they have continued to progress and will do a good job for you.
A DC 3 fixer upper on the south coast of Iceland. It's a US Navy aircraft that crashed landed in 1973, all aboard survived. The Navy stripped it of major components and then left on the beach. Its a popular spot with tourists in spite of a 1 hour walk from the parking area.
We see this plane very often in Switzerland. I think it's a sleek, elegant design, I don't get bored of it.
This time around the rural settings added a somewhat special touch: