Plane nicknames

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Discussion

bergclimber34

Original Poster:

1,176 posts

8 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
OK like the other thread, I thought a nickname thread was a starter especially for all those who worked on planes over their lives. I only know a few like Buff, Dollar thirty, Tonka etc.

I have no idea why Tornado was called Tonka, can anyone explain?

Not military only there must be loads of civvy stuff that has the same "honour" applied to it!

Eric Mc

123,848 posts

280 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
Lots and lots of aircraft acquire nicknames during their working lives. Sometimes the nickname becomes more famous than the name allocated by the manufacturer. Quite a few have been mentioned in the thread about strange aircraft names already.

The Douglas DC-3 and its many variants have had all sorts of alternative names allocated to it - both official and unofficial.

The official US military name was "Skytrain" - which was very rarely used. The British name was "Dakota" which even the Americans adopted. This was inevitably shortened to "Dak". In Vietnam, gunship variants were known as "Spooky" or "Puff the Magic Dragon".

When the Boeing B-17 first flew it had no official name but was described in some US newspapers as a veritable "Flying Fortress" so it was quickly adopted by Boeing as the official name.

The Sopwith F1 fighter originally had no name but the hump in the cowling just in front of the pilot led to it being referred to as the Camel - which was the name by which it became universally known, although never officially allocated to it.

borcy

7,512 posts

71 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
bergclimber34 said:
OK like the other thread, I thought a nickname thread was a starter especially for all those who worked on planes over their lives. I only know a few like Buff, Dollar thirty, Tonka etc.

I have no idea why Tornado was called Tonka, can anyone explain?

Not military only there must be loads of civvy stuff that has the same "honour" applied to it!
Named after Tonka Toys, they weren't particularly reliable when first in service or throughout it's life some might say.

Tony1963

5,672 posts

177 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
bergclimber34 said:
OK like the other thread, I thought a nickname thread was a starter especially for all those who worked on planes over their lives. I only know a few like Buff, Dollar thirty, Tonka etc.

I have no idea why Tornado was called Tonka, can anyone explain?

Not military only there must be loads of civvy stuff that has the same "honour" applied to it!
I was on Tornados from 1982, and the nickname of Tonka had already been adopted and used as a well humoured insult. Tonka as in tough, do anything, go anywhere. And a toy.

Compared to Buccs and Phantoms, for example, it was quite lightly built and few thought it was tough enough to last.

It did. And it did well.

bergclimber34

Original Poster:

1,176 posts

8 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
I seem to recall the Hurricane was often called the Hudd, is that one?

Eric Mc

123,848 posts

280 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
bergclimber34 said:
I seem to recall the Hurricane was often called the Hudd, is that one?
Never heard that one - ever.

Bomb equipped Hurricanes were referred to as Hurri-Bombers though.

Rotaree

1,191 posts

276 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
Not a nickname for a specific type but I used to fly a couple of of Sea Kings that had their own names - 'Damien' because it's registration was XV666 and 'Desmond' as it's side number was 22 (Tutu).

MXRod

2,834 posts

162 months

Saturday 11th January
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Queen of the Skys
747

junglie

1,996 posts

232 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
‘BUFF’ for the B52

nikaiyo2

5,320 posts

210 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
F105 was the Thud from Chief Thunderthud from the Howdy Doody television series. It was triple threat, could bomb you, strafe you or fall on you.

F111 whispering death and pig.

F104 missile with a man in it

A6 Double Ugly

A-7 "S.L.U.F" or short little ugly…

Austin Prefect

960 posts

7 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
Bone for Rockwell B1.
Apparently started with a reporter misreading 'B one'.

Gunbus for VC10, don't know where that came from. Something to do with an older Vickers product perhaps.

Belslow for Belfast.

Wimpy for Wellington. From a cartoon character,


eharding

14,526 posts

299 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
Sometimes individual aircraft attract nicknames, such as this much-loved Jodel D9 at White Waltham.



Generations of budding young commercial pilots did their hour-building in Noddy. Uber-cheap flying, if you don't mind hand-swinging it to start. There used to be a notch in the trailing edge of one of the prop blades matching the shape of a mate's thumb from where it kicked back when starting, many years ago.

mko9

2,765 posts

227 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
EF-111 was known as the Spark 'Vark

The McDonnell-Douglas F-4 Phanton II super-sonic all-weather fighter-bomber, mostly bomber (IYKYK)

Eric Mc

123,848 posts

280 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
Austin Prefect said:
Bone for Rockwell B1.
Apparently started with a reporter misreading 'B one'.

Gunbus for VC10, don't know where that came from. Something to do with an older Vickers product perhaps.

Belslow for Belfast.

Wimpy for Wellington. From a cartoon character,
A real Gunbus - which was most likely a nickname for this aeroplane too



The Supermarine Walrus biplane flying boat was more often referred to as the "Shagbat" by its crews.

And of course, the Fairey Swordfish was called the "Stringbag".

One I like from more recent years (well, the 1960s and 70s) was when BEA converted some of their Vickers Vanguard passenger airliners into freighters, they were formally known as the "Merchantman". However, BEA (and later BA) crews liked to call them "Guard's Vans".





7mike

3,148 posts

208 months

Saturday 11th January
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Huey & Tante Ju!

Excuse the crappy pics, I got one of those cheap negative converter gadgets and dug out a load of old pics. The JU 52 was at a show at North Weald in 84, wonder if it's still flying?

lazy_b

380 posts

251 months

Saturday 11th January
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The Republic XF-84H was nicknamed "Thunderscreech", because of the noise from its supersonic propellers.

Voldemort

6,869 posts

293 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
Bone


Mr Whippy

31,049 posts

256 months

Saturday 11th January
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Chipmunk was called Chimp in air cadets iirc.

eccles

13,975 posts

237 months

Saturday 11th January
quotequote all
Mr Whippy said:
Chipmunk was called Chimp in air cadets iirc.
Never heard it called that, it was always 'Chippy'.

Bradgate

3,022 posts

162 months

Saturday 11th January
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When we operated the Shorts 360 it was universally known as ‘The Shed’.



The BAE ATP fleet we operated were notoriously unreliable. So much so that ATP was said to stand for ‘Another Technical Problem’.