GARY HILTON wrote:
I did get the ID for the old girl. She is 15-1468 37502 N7269C May you rest in peace
Gary, you and I talked about trying to wrap our heads around how it was possible for that storm/tornado to rip the spar apart in a Harpoon like that. and if it was indeed 37502 then it can be explained.
A little history on 1468-37502-N7269C: This was one of the few PV-2's that was never modified for tanker or other civil use. I first saw it in 1979 or so at Falcon Field when I worked at the Pima Air Museum. At that time it was sitting on its gear without outer wing panels and the nose was off at the production break just forward of the windshield. I remember crawling inside the fuselage through the original door and wondering why the door was so thick. Bob Johnson, the director of restoration at Pima, said it held a raft and emergency supplies. I was amazed that it was so complete inside with all of the crew stations and equipment still in place. This PV-2 and the one at Pima were very complete and pretty much the only surviving Harpoons that were untouched from when they left the service.
Probably not long after I was at Falcon Field, the CAF in Wisconsin decided to build a PV-2 and they chose an ex air tanker and made a deal with the what I think was Gene Packard's outfit (Globe?) to get it ferriable. The CAF also bought the fuselage of 37502 for its interior fittings.
The CAF had the wings cut off at at the fuselage and the horizontal was similarly cut. The remaining fuselage, sans nacelles, were transported to Wisconsin where they stripped the interior.



I was told by the CAF that the remains of the fuselage was scrapped a long time ago. I guess not but since the wings were cut off it would certainly explain why the aircraft came apart so readily in the storm.
The question arises as to where the wings, nacelles and tail came from and just how the wings were put back on the fuselage. This is why I question this bureau number because of all of the effort required to rebuild a full Harpoon from a fuselage that had the wings sawed off with a chop saw right through the spars. They must have had a steel structure to hold everything together and support it on the pylon. Gary, was it pretty clear that the spars were cut at the fuselage as the photos show? Did Carl get the wings etc from Globe or the CAF? He has some of the remnants of the last PV-2 built (84064) which is the first one that the CAF WI had wanted to rebuild but unfortunately it crashed on its test flight because the crew took off from Falcon Field with the superchargers in high blower. Incidentally we have the instrument panel for 1608-84064-N7415C at our museum.
I will have to ask Carl about this as I bet he picked up the remnants of 37502 and 84064 at Falcon Field way back when and then put them back together for the golf course.
I was sad that that 37502 was cut up to begin with since she was such a rare and essentially complete PV-2. I know the CAF had big problems with corrosion on the Harpoon that they ferried in. Willy engineered the repairs for the spar and other areas but I always wondered if it would have been better to use the flyable tanker's QEC's and other parts to restore 37502. It is pure speculation that 502 may have been in better shape corrosion wise and it was a mute point once the wings were cut but I was always sad to see such a complete and original airframe cut.
The CAF did a great job and it was too bad that they ended up selling the project. Tim Savage bought it for his Harpoon project since it had overhauled engines. Unfortunately or fortunately depending on your point of view, the CAF's Harpoon and its components were mixed up when Tim's AT-6 factory was sold off at auction so the parts from 37502 went to many different areas of the Warbird world. I was able to track a lot of it down from many sources and buy or barter for the parts for our own 84062.
The door of 37502 that I mentioned going through as a youngster in 1979, pictured below, was one of the things I tracked down. It was a lot better than the original door on 062 so it has been fixed up and installed on 062. I know it sounds silly but it gives me a good feeling to have this door, that I have some personal old history with, flying again on 062. The other parts I have come across from 37502 are finding their way back on to flight status inside 062 so at least some of the old gal will continue on.




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Taigh Ramey
Vintage Aircraft, Stockton, California
http://www.twinbeech.com'KEEP ‘EM FLYING…FOR HISTORY!'