StangStung wrote:
Interesting. The NMUSAF has a fairly recently restored PT-13. I wonder what's going to happen to that when this PT-17 shows up?
It's actually the last factory built Kaydet. As per Bowers and Mayborn:
Mitch Mayborn and Peter M. Bowers wrote:
The last "Kaydet" delivered was an E-75, a special PT-13D fitted at Army request with electrical system, radio, and additional instrumentation. The c/n was 755963, Army serial number 42-17794. This did not carry the highest c/n assigned to a "Kaydet"; the last NSS-5's for the Navy, which had higher c/n's, were delivered before the final Army models were completed. Also, the highest c/n used by a "Kaydet", 758808, was higher than the total of "Kaydets" built. Some c/n's assigned under earlier contracts were cancelled along with the military serials when the contracts were cut back and subsequent c/n's were not adjusted backwards to fill the gap and reflect the true production total.
Following a special factory rollout ceremony in February, 1945, 42-17794 was used by Headquarters personnel of the Army's Midwest Procurement District, which was based in Wichita. After the war, when it became desirable to have a "Kaydet" at the plant for company use, a special effort was made to obtain this particular "Kaydet" rather than buy one at random from the several thousand that were then available on the surplus market. With civil registration number N41766 issued to Boeing June 6, 1946 and carrying lettering that proclaimed it to be the 10,346th "Kaydet", this "last of the many" was used at Wichita for utility and publicity purposes for nearly 13 years before it was donated to the U.S. Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio. To cap his long association with Stearman biplanes, J. E. Schaefer rode from Wichita to Dayton on the last company-conducted biplane flight to make the presentation. The museum accepted the plane on September 28, 1958, and it is now on permanent display in prewar trainer colors.
(Source: Mitch Mayborn and Peter M. Bowers,
Stearman Guidebook, Fourth Revised, American Aircraft 1 (Dallas, Texas: Flying Enterprise Publications, 1976), 42.)
N41766 in flight, the picture below is cropped from a
larger version with a T-37 alongside in the background:

(Source:
National Museum of the United States Air Force)
Attachment:
File comment: The last of the many. After 15 years in Boeing/Wichita service the 8585th "Kaydet" delivered (including models 70, 73 and 76) E-75 c/n 755963 was presented to the Air Force Museum, where it was repainted in the prewar Army colors.
Stearman Guidebook, 1976, page 43 (Reduced, Converted).png [ 1.59 MiB | Viewed 6002 times ]
(Source: Mitch Mayborn and Peter M. Bowers,
Stearman Guidebook, Fourth Revised, American Aircraft 1 (Dallas, Texas: Flying Enterprise Publications, 1976), 43.)
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