rwdfresno wrote:
Joe Davis is my father. N3442G was flown from Omaha to Borrego Springs or "Ocatillo Wells" as I hear it called these days. During the 1980s he sold it to Bill Klairs who began a restoration on the aircraft but it is now in storage in Rialto. My father is no longer a partner in Aero Trader however they are still all good friends. The airfield that you are talking about is
Eagle Field near Dos Palos, CA. It is a WWII primary flight training base that my father purchased in around 1980 or so. We have been slowly but surely restoring and preserving what is left of the airfield. We have a B-25J hulk that was donated by Aero Trader a number of years ago that one day we hope to have restored to a static display.
I actually have a very good video of the first flight in 20 years back in 1980 (around then). It was done on Beta video back when video was brand new but the quality was actually not bad.
N3442G on my fathers first trip to see the aircraft and dig it out of the mud
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N3442G as found cockpit
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N3442G they flew it back to CA after a few months of work
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Aero Trader donated airframe sitting in our hangar
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This is an extremely old post, but perhaps there are still enough active users around who can help me piece together the history of this airframe. In the interest of brevity I'm going to repost what I sent to Eagle Field on their webpage. Your assistance is greatly appreciated:
I'm attempting to locate a B-25, 44-86715, N3442G. I found a post on warbirdinformationexchange indicating it was owned by a Mr. Joe Davis and also makes reference to Eagle Field. Some photos may exist of it being patched up and flown by a Mr. Bill Muszala, but the links appear broken and the photos are no longer available. My grandfather recently passed and he trained in this aircraft. As a pilot I'm interested in it's fate and learned it may be stored in Rialto. If I'm on the right path, any assistance locating this aircraft would be appreciated.