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I agree - it was a few years back.IIRC there has already been someone who asked obout the plane.
And a few years back, it was identified as a….?
HiThis photo came up on a local (St Joseph, MO) Facebook Page. I am usually the guy that IDs airplanes for the group. I am fairly sure it is some type of Lincoln Standard. Any help?
That's a Hay Barn, which were fairly large and common through the mid-west back then.There is the small airship shed behind the aircraft, are you sure it is in the USA?
HiI beleive we determined that it was a Lincoln-Standard L.S. 5:
ID neede
There were so many custom variants, however.
HiThis photo came up on a local (St Joseph, MO) Facebook Page. I am usually the guy that IDs airplanes for the group. I am fairly sure it is some type of Lincoln Standard. Any help?
The one I posted is a 2 1/2 bay plane and that is what's really throwing me. I know Lincoln-Standard out of Nebraska produce a lot of modified Standard aircraft and Rosecrans Field here in St Joe used a lot of them.Hi
Another close but maybe not exact match in all respects appears to be the "modified Standard biplanes", wiki has an image:
View attachment 837271
This has a number of differences as can be seen, but another image from page 36 of 'Airlines of the United States since 1914' by R E G Davies, has slightly less differences:
View attachment 837272
But still not an exact match, it may depend on how many modifications this type had in its career or it may still be an entirely different type?
Mike
The wing from that bottom one matches up well with my pic, closest thing I have seen, thanksHi
Another close but maybe not exact match in all respects appears to be the "modified Standard biplanes", wiki has an image:
View attachment 837271
This has a number of differences as can be seen, but another image from page 36 of 'Airlines of the United States since 1914' by R E G Davies, has slightly less differences:
View attachment 837272
But still not an exact match, it may depend on how many modifications this type had in its career or it may still be an entirely different type?
Mike