Oxmans is a great store and Mr. O is a real nice guy with quite a collection. There is still a lot of good things there but most of the real cool old stuff is not for sale but it is like a museum that is well worth visit.
The last ball turret that Mr. O had was this one:

Mr. O was kind enough to let me purchase the turret a while ago. It was still on its shipping skid and was new old stock. I put hydraulic fluid in it and it fired right up and has run great ever since. There is a video of it in action here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4GS1PND7pA&feature=player_embedded More information and photos here:
http://www.twinbeech.com/sperry_ball_turret.htmSadly four of those R3350's that you saw at Oxmans can be found in Greenland:
These images shamelessly stolen from
http://www.dhc4and5.org/N124DG_2.html where you can see other shots of the Kee Bird
I have many fond memories and great parts from Oxmans Surplus. Well worth the visit.
Palley's was another great place. I used to visit it regularly in my youth. They used to let me roam around and I would take a shopping cart along with me. Once I came back with a loaded cart and a guy named Vic gave me some prices too high for my the meager allowance I received from my parents at the time. I was 15 or so. I returned the parts I was salivating over back to the storage racks at Palley's and went home with one or two treasures that i could afford. A few months later I returned with a little more saved up money and when I came through the door Vic said I was a thief and that I had stolen the parts I had in the cart the last time I visited. I told him what I thought of his false accusations and said that the parts were likely still where I had left them. I took a cart out in the warehouse and retrieve all of the parts i had supposedly stolen and he apologized. He then asked if he could hire my services to identify all of their aircraft parts as they were going to have an auction to get rid of it all. The bastard called a thief one minute and then he wanted to hire me the next. I agreed and when he asked me how much I would charge I thought for a minute. My favorite TV show at the timne was Rockford Files and when Jim Rockford was asked how much he charged he said $300 per day plus expenses. I figured that this was good enough for me so I told Vic $300 per day plus expenses to which he agreed. Wow! I was making the same money as Jim Rockford and alkl I had to do was to identify old aircraft parts. How cool was that for a 15 year old! It didn't matter that much in the end because I ended up signing over my paycheck back to them for cool parts anyway. They had some amazing stuff too. I found a great stash of Norden Bombsight stabilizers there on top of a pallet rack 20 feet up. There was about 200+ K-3 and K-4 computing gun sights for Sperry upper and ball turrets that were returned from the European theatre and they had painted markings on them from the specific aircraft they were removed from. There was a B-25B/C/D greenhouse complete with the 30 cal sockets in the nose and side. Helldiver parts, P-38 tails, as mentioned, scoops, B-36 turrets and lots more. I found the upper half of a B-25H nose that I sent to the Weary Warriors and it is flying today on Barbie III. sadly a lot of the parts were bought and melted by the scrappers but a lot of parts made it out of there too. I remember seeing crates of sheepskin pants and boots. I got cases of AN6530 goggle lenses from Palley's and I still have a lot of them today of all different shades. Palley's was one of the great surplus stores back then. Ahhhh the good old days....
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Thank you!
Taigh Ramey
Vintage Aircraft, Stockton, California
http://www.twinbeech.com'KEEP ‘EM FLYING…FOR HISTORY!'