VH-ELI Lockheed
(Aermacchi) AL60-B2 Santa Maria
(c/n 11-6156)
In the late 1950s Lockheed
designed a utility aircraft to the specs of General Juan Azcarate of
Mexico.
The result was the Lockheed
60, also known as the LASA-60. Production was to be undertaken by
a new subsidiary, Lockheed
Azcarate SA in Mexico. In the event, only 18 were produced by
this
facility (seems hardly worth
setting it up) and plans were afoot to build the craft in both
Argentine and
Australia. Neither of those
came to anything, but Aeronautica Macchi tooled up and produced a num-
ber in Italy, of which
VH-ELI, seen above, was one. The above shot was taken by Richard
Maclean
at Essendon in 1962 just after
the aircraft arrived in Australia. Anecdotal story: I
lived in Southern
California in the
1960s and around 1964 (my youngest was three, I remember) we took a
short sojourn
to Ensenada in Baja
California (basically to see a Mexican Circus.....that's a bit like a
Chinese Firedrill).
Anyway, a visit to Ensenada
Airport at that time revealed a LASA-60 sitting in the middle of the
field.
Commencing to trek over to
photograph it (I think it was probably in Mexican Air Force livery) I
was
immediately pounced on by a
cadre of AK-47 toting Mexican soldiers (complete with bandido mous-
taches) and told that this
was a "secret'; aircraft and I couldn't go after it! Needless to
say I did a quick
180! Anyway, the
single Australian example above has had a long history, winding up as a
parachute
dropping machine. For more images
of it in different liveries and its complete story visit Ron Cuskelly's
fascinating entry on "The
Lockheed File" at:
http://www.adastron.com/lockheed/lasa-60/lasa-60.htm
Greg Banfield saw it at Camden, NSW on 28
March 1976 (below) in an attractive paint job wearing
Airmove Air Taxi titling.
The inscription beneath
reads 'Aircraft Engineering Associates Pty Ltd'.