A new book in my library.

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Steve,

If you do get back to College Park, make sure I give you a copy of my latest versions of the Sarah Clark finding aids - either drop me an e-mail or bring a thumb drive. I've repaired most of the errors introduced by the interns who help process and rehouse the materials, and added some critical notes on contents.

(We may have met about this before, but I'm notoriously bad with names and faces. Still, there are monthly updates to the finding aids that might prove useful.)

Cheers,



Dana
 
Thank you. I am obsessed with the arcane and to read this fills me with immense joy. Would gladly buy an expanded edition. - Jim
 
I'm afraid I can't travel for medical reasons, my wife does all of that. You sent me an email in August 2021 with a list of "hits" on XP-67 in RG342. I'm frankly baffled by the whole Sarah Clark Collection thing. Ray Ortensie at AFMC/HO said you were the guy who knew the most about it. He had previously said this: "The collection, also known as the Sarah Clark Collection, is still Air Force Records and in November 2019 was released back to me. However, for years they would not even let Air Force Historians in to see it. There are no good finding aids for what is in that collection. I have rough backing slips of what they shipped over but even that doesn't tell you what is in there. I do however have a finding aid for the items of the Sarah Clark Collection that was accessioned at College Park. I went up there for a week in September 2019 to do a rough look through the collection and had hoped to go back a few times in 2020 but obviously that never happened. Let me see if I can get those spreadsheets to you." The 2 spreadsheets that he sent are the biggest ones I've ever seen, just under 130 thousand lines, so I'm glad somebody else is working on opening up that collection because there are bound to be treasures hidden in something whose index alone is so massive. I had heard a rumor that the index only includes every 10th item in the collection itself, or something like that.
 
Good stuff. I never knew that turboprops had been tried on the Ambassador.
AFAIK:
After finishing its work at Airspeed the second prototype G-AKRD was in 1953 transferred to Bristol for testing of the Proteus turboprop engines, and in 1958 to Rolls-Royce for testing Tyne turboprop engines and later Dart turboprop engines. So it was used only as a turboprop test bed by engine manufacturers, not by or for Airspeed.

There was a project AS.59 for a Mk II Ambassador with four RR Dart turboprop engines but that was cancelled in 1951 without any production.
 
Something different: Ken Lussey's Orkney Trilogy.

These books (Bloody Orkney, The Danger of Life and Eyes Turned Skywards) are espionage thrillers largely set in northern Scotland and the Orkney Islands during WW2. They are notable for sticking to the facts as much as possible, with a lot of people, places and events being real, or very nearly so. They are also interesting for the focus on aircraft (German as well as British featuring in detail). My knowledge of this subject isn't that great and doesn't really compare with others on this forum (especially the aircraft bit!) but I was very impressed with these books, which are really one continuous story. Definitely worth a look.
 
So far I've only flipped through it, and not read anything yet.
I was already sceptical, having read the cover referring to the BoB, and I'll admit that, the presentation of the book itself doesn't do it any favours, being printed on "cheap" pulp stock, and with mediocre quality illustrations, using stock shots not all of which are relative to the time period being discussed. For example, a pic of a late mark Spitfire when referring to the BoB, which suggests lazy research on someone's part, there being many, many period images available.
Being only 120 pages of narrative, in paperback, from an author and a publisher I've never heard of, also starts alarm bells ringing.
However, if I can get through the first 75% to 80% of the text, which seems to be coverage of development, history and politics, and get to the "meat" of the story, the i may be able to comment. I'm about to settle down and start reading ...................
 

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