skymstr02 wrote:
Nope, the airport manager and the county had declared the airplanes as hazardous, and the road division brought in a bulldozer and balled up the aircraft into piles and pushed the remains into the landfill off of the end of runway 1. If you walk along taxiway D, you can see shards of aluminum imbedded into the asphalt.
When we learned of the impending demise, we were given permission to scavenge what we wanted of the aircraft. We got as many accessories as we could, ie, voltage regulators, reverse current relays, hydraulic pumps, gear actuators, etc. We made and sold a lot of log splitters with the pumps and actuators.
What a depressing turn of events..if it's the same airport manager that I'm
thinking of (Ray, I think his name was), then I'm not terribly surprised.
That guy always had an "axe he was grinding on". He was always up in
arms about one of the local operators...rhymes with golly...that he was
after.
Did the DC-3's suffer the same fate? In '73 a South American outfit was
buying the DC's and an FBO I worked at were tasked with recovering the
ailerons and tailfeathers..doping for dollars...I learned ribstitching on
that little job. A bad year for our outfit. Our D-18 went down...Arab Oil
Embargo hit and I think that killed the DC-3 deal...so the FBO folded-up.
I pumped gas for the airport manager, and after awhile decided the Navy
was a more exciting proposition than Conroe..and it was. General
aviation got pretty slow for awhile there..not many folks were flying.
Thanks for filling in the blanks Skymstr.
Wonder if those log-splitters are still around??