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        Bumper 
        Biggin! 
      Damien 
        Burke reports on the saviour of an old favourite 
      With the 
        demise of the North Weald shows some time ago, Biggin Hill was left as 
        London's only major airshow and thanks to skyrocketing public liability 
        insurance rates after the September 11th terrorist attacks in the USA 
        and a lack of big sponsors, it seemed that this show, too, was doomed. 
        With no sign of a sponsor, the show was simply no longer economically 
        viable. 
      Thankfully, 
        however, with only a few months to go, replacement sponsors were found, 
        notably local paper News Shopper and the Westmead Business Group and arrangements 
        put in place to minimise the cost of insurance - such as a massive increase 
        in crowdline security staff. Unfortunately for hard-core enthusiasts, 
        though, the line-up was pretty similar to previous Biggin shows and some 
        of the star acts were not able to appear, for various reasons. Saddest 
        of all, of course, was the loss of Pierre Hollander and the Spirit of 
        St. Louis replica at the Coventry airshow the weekend before. Also damaged 
        at that same show had been the Sea Vixen, and while de Havilland had hoped 
        to get it repaired in time for Biggin, they didn't quite manage it. 
      
       So, 
        left with what some had described as a rather pedestrian line-up, Biggin's 
        reputation hung on the quality of the display acts this year - and thankfully 
        they were top notch. RAF participation wasn't bad considering the recent 
        ending of the war in Iraq, with Tucano, Hawk, Jaguar and Tornado F3 solo 
        displays as well as, of course, the Red Arrows. The Tucano and Jag were 
        both superb, with an added bonus being the use of a Jaguar T4 on the Sunday. 
        The Hawk display seems quite different from last year's, with more emphasis 
        on grace than the hard precision of the previous routine. Wearing a commemorative 
        100 years of flight badge on the sides of the fuselage was a nice touch 
        - but pity it couldn't have been made into a more flamboyant display scheme 
        -  pure 
        black aircraft are a sod to take good photos of! The Tornado display seemed 
        to be a bit on the rough side, with two appearances on Saturday (the first 
        being a practice) and an aborted display on Sunday (reason unknown). Perhaps 
        the increasingly gusty conditions forced the decision to stop the display 
        which was a pity as Sunday's display looked rather smoother than those 
        on Saturday. The wind certainly put paid to the RAF Falcons, who had to 
        be content with a fast pass inside their Hercules dropship. 
      International 
        military participation has got thinner and thinner over the years at Biggin, 
        and this year did little to change things with the only foreign displays 
        being from a French Falcon 10 and a Belgian Alpha Jet. The Alpha was a 
        sprightly performer but the Falcon 10 limited itself to a few passes up 
        and down the display line before returning to Earth. The expected Belgian 
        F-16 was shelved when the Belgian Air Force suddenly required an outrageous 
        insurance fee with only weeks to go before the show. 
       Foreign 
        civilian participation was a different matter however, with the US-based 
        Grumman Albatross making another appearance at Biggin (her last in the 
        UK before the long series of hops to get back home to the USA) and a pair 
        of old timers from Sweden - a Tummelisa (1919 biplane type) and a Bleriot 
        replica. These were part of the celebration of 100 years of flight, aided 
        by a ground-bound scale replica of the Wright Flyer which puttered up 
        and down a few hundred feet of the crowdline, invisible and  unheard 
        by many. The Swedish pair, flown by Mikael Carlsson, turned out to be 
        some of stars of the show. Saturday saw an eye-opening performance from 
        him in the Bleriot, despite a stiff wind, followed by what has to have 
        been the single most impressive demonstration of a biplane I have ever 
        seen when he took the Tummelisa up for 10 minutes of the sort of aerobatics 
        that would embarrass the average Pitts Special. Back on the ground he 
        was greeted with a well-earned standing ovation from both crowd and jaded 
        press corps alike - "They're built to take it, this is how you should 
        fly them" being one modest comment from the 'crazy Swede'. He was 
        later given the award for best solo display, but also asked to tone it 
        down a bit for Sunday! 
      On the warbird 
        front we were well provided for with the RNHF Swordfish and Firefly (the 
        latter making one of its first re-appearances on the airshow circuit for 
        many years), the BBMF trio of Lancaster, Spitfire and Hurricane (the Spit 
        being AB910 resplendent in her new desert camouflage scheme), Angie Soper's 
        Yak-11 (Sunday only), Sally B and the Breitling Fighters (of which more 
        shortly). 
       Heavy 
        prop action came courtesy of Air Atlantique, who provided a DC-6, DC-3, 
        Rapide, Prentice, Pembroke and Twin Pioneer - pretty much their entire 
        range of aircraft and echoing many of the displays at Coventry the weekend 
        before - very handy for those who couldn't make it up to that show.  
      Family friendly 
        flying from the Utterly Butterly pair (who I grudgingly admit are putting 
        on a better and better display of aerobatics each year) kept the attention 
        of the youngsters (and old pervs leering at the girls in lycra) while 
        an Su-26 aerobatic display impressed some and bored others -  once 
        again, as at Southend, a great demo of how powerful the engine is but 
        little else - and once you've seen one go at hanging it on the prop, you 
        don't need to see it again and again. Brian Lecomber in his Extra 300 
        put on a more varied display which relied on skill as well as horsepower. 
      Classic jets 
        were the F-86 and T-33, both from Duxford - the T-33 standing in for the 
        missing Sea Vixen. Now the Sea Vixen's display has been reigned back to 
        such a gentle low G affair, the T-33 was a more than adequate stand-in, 
        with a routine that exhibits more power and greater volume than the Vixen 
        can manage these days. The F-86 similarly put on a stonking little display 
        with its signature black smoke trail making it easy to spot in the distance. 
        A challenging piece of formation flying was the appearance of the F-86 
        with the RNHF Firefly, marking the two types' use in the Korean War. Saturday 
        saw the F-86 sailing past the Firefly but on Sunday pilot Cliff Spink 
        got it dead right and appeared welded to the Firefly's wing for the entire 
        pass - lovely. 
       So 
        on to the next surprise star act - a Virgin Airbus A340-600. With Richard 
        Branson on the ground to talk about how he wants to wrest Concorde away 
        from the spoilsports at BA intent on retiring her, the A340 provided a 
        stunning display belying its huge size... and the banner on the rear fuselage 
        said it all! At one point a tight turn low over the airfield boundary 
        must have had drivers on the road outside reaching for their mobiles to 
        dial 999 - very impressive indeed. 
      But back 
        to the Breitlings and boy were they good. With the P-40 grounded by paperwork 
        problems and the P-51 being repainted, two stand-ins had been required 
        and Historic Flying at Duxford had kindly supplied a pair of Spitfires. 
        Three Spitfires and a Corsair in a formation team? Fantastic! And so it 
        proved to be, with Saturday's display a cracking bit of sheer entertainment, 
        bettered on Sunday with even more roaring about both in formation and 
        as a tailchase. Sunday even saw them disappear behind trees on the horizon 
        and pop up one after the other climbing into a loop - just the sort of 
        stuff that gets your heart pumping extra fast. They certainly deserved 
        their best team display award. 
       Last 
        word on both days was left to Ray Hanna, taking Spitfire MH434 up for 
        a beautiful display backed brilliantly by an emotional piece of music. 
        A single Spitfire joyously rolling over Biggin Hill, this most famous 
        of Battle of Britain airfields, can bring on a shiver to the most stoic 
        of characters and it was simply the perfect end to a damn good show. The 
        organisers clearly agreed and gave Ray an award to mark his many years 
        of contributions to the Biggin Hill show. 
      While tickets 
        were expensive for the single person in a car on the day, a car with five 
        people was better value at less than a tenner a head and  the 
        great majority of tickets were for perhaps the first time at a major UK 
        airshow bought in advance over the internet (at a significant discount 
        of course). Sales were handled by the RIAT organisers - in these days 
        of increasing expenses, pooling resources like this is clearly the way 
        forward. As to whoever appeased the weather gods and managed to pull two 
        days of mostly scorching sunshine out of a hat (when both mornings had 
        been grey and dismal) - well done that man. Get in touch, I know some 
        show organisers who would appreciate your services! 
         
      With thanks 
        to Jenny Casemore, Nick Smith and the rest of the press team. 
        
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