RE: [MV] pictures from veterans day parade staging area, Dallas TX

From: Horrocks, Aaron (ACHb@pge.com)
Date: Fri Nov 12 2004 - 08:50:29 PST


Okay...

I have to ask: How does a "civilian airborne scooter" become 'airborne'?
Push it out of a plane? Does it get jump wings? Were these scooters used by civilian airports?

Aaron Horrocks
http://www.ammoday.us/ - National Ammo Day! Nov 19

-----Original Message-----
From: Military Vehicles Mailing List [mailto:mil-veh@mil-veh.org]On
Behalf Of Sonny Heath
Sent: Friday, November 12, 2004 8:43 AM
To: Military Vehicles Mailing List
Subject: Re: [MV] pictures from veterans day parade staging area, Dallas
TX

An authenic military airborne scooter did not have coil springs. Coil
springs were on a civilian airborne scooter.

Some people do paint the civilian ones up in OD and about 99% of the people
don't know the difference.

This is what the collector crowd says anyway.

Sonny

----- Original Message -----
From: "Patrick Jankowiak" <recycler@swbell.net>
To: "Sonny Heath" <sonny@defuniak.com>
Cc: "Military Vehicles Mailing List" <mil-veh@mil-veh.org>
Sent: Thursday, November 11, 2004 10:49 PM
Subject: Re: [MV] pictures from veterans day parade staging area, Dallas TX

> Yes.. Is that wrong? I'm no scooter expert..
>
> Sonny Heath wrote:
>
> > Do I see coil springs on the rear of that motorscooter?
> >
> > Sonny
> >
>

===Mil-Veh is a member-supported mailing list===
To unsubscribe, send e-mail to: <mil-veh-off@mil-veh.org>
To switch to the DIGEST mode, send e-mail to <mil-veh-digest@mil-veh.org>
To reach a human, contact <ack@mil-veh.org>



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Sat May 07 2005 - 20:37:40 PDT