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Some DC-3 photos.

Fri Dec 20, 2013 5:13 pm

These were all taken at Love Field in 1985, when I worked at Associated Air Center.

The cleanest radial engines I have ever seen on this one.

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Tinsley's Chicken "Yardbird"

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Texas Instruments-we never asked what they did with this plane!

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JMC

Re: Some DC-3 photos.

Fri Dec 20, 2013 5:42 pm

It's been a long time since I've seen a DC-3 with a full Dee Howard installation. N132 BB is now a LANCAIR.

Re: Some DC-3 photos.

Fri Dec 20, 2013 10:36 pm

When I worked in Conroe, TX (CXO) N132BB would occasionally come through. This was around 1979-1980. The bottom of the wing said "BOSSBIRD" On the tail it said "If there's a better piece of chicken the roosters got it". Must have been a prior paint job. The 1985 paint job looks a little more PC!

Aircraft was based at Huntsville (HTV) and owned by the Tinsley family who owned a chain of chicken restaurants also based out of Huntsville. Not sure what happened to the Tinsley chain. If I recall the aircraft was a former C-49. Don't know why I remembered that...

Re: Some DC-3 photos.

Sat Dec 21, 2013 11:31 am

ProfromDover wrote:When I worked in Conroe, TX (CXO) N132BB would occasionally come through. This was around 1979-1980. The bottom of the wing said "BOSSBIRD" On the tail it said "If there's a better piece of chicken the roosters got it". Must have been a prior paint job. The 1985 paint job looks a little more PC!

Aircraft was based at Huntsville (HTV) and owned by the Tinsley family who owned a chain of chicken restaurants also based out of Huntsville. Not sure what happened to the Tinsley chain. If I recall the aircraft was a former C-49. Don't know why I remembered that...



"Bossbird" makes way more sense. I was making an assumption based on a limited memory! I am glad you knew the 'Rest of the story', thank you.

JMC

PS. I did look up Tinsley's on the web, apparently there is still at least one store down near Houston somewhere.

Re: Some DC-3 photos.

Mon Dec 23, 2013 1:04 pm

eagle21 wrote:Tinsley's Chicken "Yardbird"

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Bob Pond bought this airplane and it became Miss Angela. It was traded off as part of the deal for the B-17. It has since lost its pre war Navy paint job and last I heard is in Texas. I think we were told it was a C-41A...

Re: Some DC-3 photos.

Mon Dec 23, 2013 2:08 pm

49, 41, whatever it takes... :D

Re: Some DC-3 photos.

Mon Dec 23, 2013 3:33 pm

ProfromDover wrote:When I worked in Conroe, TX (CXO) N132BB would occasionally come through. This was around 1979-1980. The bottom of the wing said "BOSSBIRD" On the tail it said "If there's a better piece of chicken the roosters got it". Must have been a prior paint job. The 1985 paint job looks a little more PC!

Aircraft was based at Huntsville (HTV) and owned by the Tinsley family who owned a chain of chicken restaurants also based out of Huntsville. Not sure what happened to the Tinsley chain. If I recall the aircraft was a former C-49. Don't know why I remembered that...


It looks nice and shiny theses days...or at least it did in 2010:

Link to picture of it landing at Oshkosh

Re: Some DC-3 photos.

Mon Dec 23, 2013 5:26 pm

Warbirdnerd wrote:
eagle21 wrote:Tinsley's Chicken "Yardbird"

Image

Bob Pond bought this airplane and it became Miss Angela. It was traded off as part of the deal for the B-17. It has since lost its pre war Navy paint job and last I heard is in Texas. I think we were told it was a C-41A...

'Impressed' DC-3's taken from airlines got different model numbers assigned depending on the engines, radios, cabin door and location (left or right side, swing down airstair or hinged) so the correct manuals and procedures were used, who was her original operator/customer?
After the war, airplanes were released pell mell to the original customers, but little to no attention was paid to equipment beyond engine types so UNTIED for example could have gotten a large number of left handed door airplanes to 'back fill' on it's taken right hand door standard setup and carriers put big arrows on the instrument panel so the Captain wouldn't arrive at it's destination and turn the airplane so the entry door faces out on the ramp and not facing the terminal :lol: :lol: :oops:
Dee Howard did a land office business converting C-47's into DC-3C's for PAN AM and others with passenger doors instead of cargo doors, extra fuel tankage, and they developed the equipment seen on BOSSBIRD which added a few extra knots to cruising speeds.

Re: Some DC-3 photos.

Mon Dec 23, 2013 11:51 pm

i'd like to see some of the pre- war douglas dc-3 / Japanese tabby version w/ the elongated flight deck windows! pre- war license built of course by the soon to be enemy!! :roll:

Re: Some DC-3 photos.

Fri Dec 27, 2013 10:21 pm

Sentimental Journeys (N97H) was bought later by Bud Field and restored to better than new condition. Prior to his passing, he sold it to Steve Hiller (son of helicopter builder Stanley Hiller Jr) and it is flown around the SF Bay Area on a regular basis, making it to several air shows each year. Although this pictures a few years old, this is what she looks like now: http://www.airport-data.com/aircraft/photo/000012221.html

Re: Some DC-3 photos.

Sat Dec 28, 2013 11:22 am

Roger Cain wrote:Sentimental Journeys (N97H) was bought later by Bud Field and restored to better than new condition. Prior to his passing, he sold it to Steve Hiller (son of helicopter builder Stanley Hiller Jr) and it is flown around the SF Bay Area on a regular basis, making it to several air shows each year. Although this pictures a few years old, this is what she looks like now: http://www.airport-data.com/aircraft/photo/000012221.html

The paint job reminds me of the Otis Spunkmeyer fleet of years past, was it one of the cookie companies air tours fleet?

Re: Some DC-3 photos.

Sat Dec 28, 2013 12:10 pm

yes, Bud Field bought it from Otis Spunkmeyer when they sold off all non-cookie business related properties. They had two DC-3's, the second one was NC41HQ, a C-41 (38-502). I had the pleasure of flying in both under Spunkmeyer's ownership, and twice when it was owned by Bud Field, once during the 70th Anniversary of the DC-3 which included a touch and go at SFO Airport.
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