Does anyone know anything about this? It was receive through another group...
Robbie
http://www.buffalonews.com/cityregion/story/372010.html
B-17 may be on a farewell mission
Flying Fortress to fly customers Saturday
By Tom Buckham NEWS STAFF REPORTER
Updated: 06/17/08 7:05 AM
Charles Lewis/Buffalo News
Ray Fowler, a captain with Liberty Foundation, flies the Liberty Belle on Monday during a media flight.
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BUFFALO NEWS VIDEO: Riding along with the Liberty Belle
Take a good look at Liberty Belle winging overhead Saturday on its latest visit to the Niagara Frontier. Ride along for the spectacular view if you can afford the $430.
Might be your last chance.
The restored B-17 Flying Fortress survived a 1979 tornado that flipped another airplane on top of it, destroying its midsection, but high fuel and insurance prices may ground it forever once the current 50-city U. S. tour ends this weekend in Buffalo and Rochester.
It is due to fly across the Atlantic next month, following the route used to deliver B-17s to Europe during World War II, but after that all bets are off on future flights.
The four-engine bomber is relatively fuel-efficient. The 1,700-gallon fuel load goes a long way at the usual cruising speed of 150 to 160 mph, Capt. Raymond Fowler pointed out Monday after parking the 34,000- pound aircraft at the Prior Aviation terminal at Buffalo Niagara International Airport.
But at a cost of $1 million a year to fly, and $100,000 to insure, vintage warplanes like Liberty Belle are becoming too expensive for the aficionados who own them — in this case the nonprofit Liberty Belle Foundation of Douglas, Ga.
Only continued public interest in the historic plane, and people’s willingness to pay for the half-hour flights, will keep it in the air, said Fowler, the foundation’s chief pilot, before taking a group of reporters and photographers up for a spin. He kept a safe distance from a line of thunderstorms that blackened skies over northern Erie and Niagara counties in midafternoon.
One of the last of more than 12,000 B-17s built by Boeing during the war, Liberty Belle never saw combat and was named for a famed Flying Fortress that flew countless missions as part of the 8th Air Force’s 390th Bomb Group.
Like many out-of-work warplanes, it was sold for scrap in 1947 but was saved from the junk heap, used as a test craft for turboprop engines, bought by a Connecticut historical airplane group and nearly trashed by the tornado before it was rescued by Don Brooks, a Floridian whose father had been a tail gunner on the original Liberty Belle.
Brooks started the Liberty Foundation, which over 14 years restored the craft to its wartime configuration. It started flying in 2004 and first visited Buffalo a year ago.
Military aviation history met the present for a brief moment as Liberty Belle departed for the media flight.
The 1940s bomber and the Navy’s famed Blue Angels precision flying team passed each other on the taxiway. The seven distinctive blue-and-gold jets dropped down briefly to refuel at Prior Aviation on the way home from a Canadian air show, the company said.
Unlike Fowler, the Navy pilots needn’t worry about how much fuel those high-performance engines burn, or what it costs.
Liberty Belle flights will be offered from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. Saturday at Prior Aviation, on North Airport Drive off Aero Drive. Additional flights will go up Sunday from Rochester Airport. Call (918) 340-0243 for reservations.
tbuckham@buffnews.com