skydaddy61 wrote:
What's the story on that gloss-black P-38? That's one spiffy looking plane!
That is the old Gary Levitz N345 Double Trouble, race #38.
Ran for a while in a pseudo-military, CAF scheme in the early-mid-70's. Then, as Gary became disenchanted with the way the CAF was going, he pulled out of there and ran it bare metal from '78-80.
In 1983, the late Ralph Payne painted it black with a big red 38 on the tail--which he said made a very big airplane look really small--and Gary brought it to Reno.
The crew guys got a little too excited, and wanted to get the plane up and running before the support truck arrived on site against Ralph's wishes. The late Richard Rasnopher (aka 'Rotten Richard') towed the plane out on the ramp to do an engine check, while Ralph and Gary looked on. At some point during/after climging into the cockpit, Richard bumped the landing gear selector valve into the 'up' position. As soon as the right engine started and power went to the systems, the right main gear retracted--as it sat there on the ground.
Gary just turned around and walked away in disgust. Ralph told me later "If Gary had had a gun on him at that moment, I believe he would have shot Richard."
Dinged up the right prop, wingtip, and bent the tail boom.
Gary sold the plane to some guy on the east coast, who kept it at Stead the rest of '83 and '84 while repairing it, and then it got re-registered and sold to John MacGuire for the War Eagles Museum.
I think it is fantastic that they decided to keep it in the black/polished paint scheme, as it really looks sharp. Still has the modified exhaust system (turbochargers removed) and the clipped tip props on it from it's racing days. Only missing the red 38 on the tail.
I know for a fact that in the years before he died, Gary regretted having sold the P-38. He loved that bird. And at some point in the mid-90's, he ferried the Evergreen Aviation Museum's P-38...and it really got the old feelings stirred up to get her back. Unfortunately, Gary died in an accident at Reno before that could ever happen--whether or not the Museum would have even sold it back to him.