Hello all,
First post here. Years-long lurker and warbird enthusiast. My grandfather was a bombardier/gunner on PBY-5As, TBM/TBFs, PB4Y-2s, and B-25s in the Navy in the Pacific. He was 16 when the war started and lied about his age to get in. His wife, my grandmother, was a spotter at Ellington Field in the war with her girlfriends. These grandparents are largely the ones responsible for getting me interested in warbirds, and airplanes in general. I have fond memories of visiting them in the Dallas/Fort Worth area starting back as a child and going up to the current (they are still alive), asking them about the war, and visiting the various airplane museums in the area. Once in the mid-1990s, my grandmother and I were visiting Cavannaugh and White Lightning came in and landed. We got to look over it and saw it take off later that day. My grandmother always said the P-38 was her favorite airplane. Said she remembers seeing them at Ellington. Years later I told her it had crashed and was now flying for Red Bull, but was the same airplane we saw that day.
I am an engineer at Air Tractor in Texas. In the front office, there is a signed photo of White Lightning. Apparently, Lefty stored it here in the factory for a period of time (years?). I don’t recall if he had an ag spraying service or what, but he knew Leland Snow, the founder of Air Tractor and Leland let him keep the airplane in the factory. The current company president told me that the radiators were always leaking and Lefty never had them properly overhauled so he would keep auto parts store coolant leak clogger liquid in the baggage compartment and pour it in by the quart. Also, he said he would keep a long small diameter metal rod with a hammer in the airplane. He’d run the rod down the tubes and smack with a hammer to try to shore up the leaking solder joints! The guy telling me the story indicated “Lefty did what he needed to keep the airplane flying”. Right or wrong, it was a neat story to hear.
From 2017 – 2019, I lived in Madras, OR. It was awesome to be in the same town as the Erickson collection. It was very common for their warbirds to fly right over our house. I lost count of how many times I visited the museum. I was flying a C170A at the time and it was great fun to share the airport with them.
Stephan Nelle
|