Yea these are good photos. I like the aircraft. The bi-planes with two wings are the Stearman Pt-17 Kadets. They called them the washing machines because of the many want to be pilots that washed out of pilot school trying to learn how to fly. These were your basic trainer planes and would top out at 100 kts. I had the pleasure of flying one like the blue airframe with yellow wings near St.Louis, Mo. in 2001. It was fun but when making sharp turns with it, the airspeed would fall off very fast then have to level the wings and let it gain the lost airspeed. It is a very fun plane to fly but you have to fly it at all times even on the ground. Also I had the pleasure of flying a P-51 D Mustang at Falcon Field near Atlanta, Ga. in May of 2005. You can find it listed on the Commemorative Air Force web site in Atlanta as Ole Red Nose. It was used as a trainer but not listed as a full trainer by being a T-51 Mustang. It is mostly all original except it has no gun sites. Most of the Mustangs today do not have the original gun sites. You are strapped in a parachute first then the seat belt, 5 point harness. If you want to fly it then you are checked out on the few instruments, stick and rudder pedals throttle with push button talk switch. To make a long story shorter it has soooooomuch power that you feel like you can concquer any flying task. At startup it sounds like a 6 cylinder engine but at takeoff it comes alive and is deafening. As you wait for the tail to come up so you can see over the long nose you watch you manifold pressure to keep it below 40inches so it want do a ground loop. As all pilots you love this airplane at first site and it will show you some great pleasures but it can kick your butt at a moments notice if you don't watch out at all times. I got to do 90 degree turns, saw and felt what it was like to do a 320 mph in a high speed dive below the trees at a small airport. It does the dives in short order. It is incredibly fast and i'll never forget that day. I can now see it was a great aircraft for our military pilots. mike