PorkScratching wrote:Your efforts have paid off again Andy - those shots are a great record of the old TriStar, and in lovely light too. Looking at the tyres I don't think it's been tugged about for quite a while. At the last "Spotters Saturday" the Aerozone lady said it was probably going to be scrapped soon and she hopes to get the nosecone for display, and any other bits that are still in reasonable condition.
Thanks Nick, I hadn't noticed the tyres, a couple look totally flat when I zoom in on the original and others pretty deflated (a bit like ipswich fans this morning!). Even Kwik Fit would struggle to sort that out in less than a couple of hours.
for those that don't know (and are interested) here's a brief history of it's working life:
I't a Tristar 50 and it started life as G-BEAL with British Airways and then British Airtours and Caledonian, in 1994 it became SE-DPM with air Ops before returning to the British register as G-CEAP with International Airways in 1996 (it went back to Caledonian for a while in 1997 and was sold to classic Airways as G-IOIT in 1998, delivered to Stansted in April 1998 but never operated by them.
I flew on a couple of British Airtours Tristars so will have to look back to see if this was one of them if I have the records still.
HTH
Andy