While on vacation in the Pacific
Northwest last month, I was able to visit the usual warbird junkie sites (Flying Heritage Collection, Historic Flight Foundation,and Museum of Flight-including a tour thru Boeing Bee). Also on my list to visit was Olympic Flight Museum at at Olympia Regional Airport as they have a Huey that was in my Vietnam unit (116th Assault Helicopter Co) the same time I was there-being a maintenance guy, I probably worked on it at one time or another. Thru WIX's Brad, I found out the Huey wasn't at the museum, but at
Northwest Helicopters, also located at the airport and he graciously offered to give me and my family an early Saturday morning tour of their shop. During the tour I learned that
Northwest Helicopters is the largest Huey "rebuilder" in the US and has somewhere around 80 Hueys awaiting resale. Prices run from around $250K for a "stripped" H model to $3 million for a loaded version with a glass cockpit and leather interior. Here are a few pictures from my tour:
Huey's final resting place. Occasionally a movie or TV company will buy one of these for use in a set.

This one is being slowly picked apart, eventually it will end up with the others in the above photo.

The following 6 shots are from their warehouse where most of the inventory is stored.
Northwest buys them from governments that are selling them off. I wonder how many are Vietnam vets?





Northwest Helicopters works on more than Hueys. This is the shop for the "smaller"
helicopters.

The Huey shop.



Lots of stuff in outside storage.

I want to thank Brad for giving us a tour, I had no idea there were this many Hueys in one place or that there was such a demand for them.