(CBS13) SACRAMENTO A very special C-47 is about to fly to a new Northern California home. The C-47 lived for decades at the Nut Tree Airport in Vacaville. Its new home will be a few miles away at Travis Air Museum.
Mechanics gingerly probed the innards of the 64-year-old C-47 looking for just the right place to lift her without breaking anything.
Tomorrow an Army National Guard Chinook helicopter will sling lift the historic airplane to its new home at the Travis Air Museum.
The aircraft weights a little over 17,000 pounds, a little less than nine tons, so when you lift it, you better bring some stout equipment.
The National Guard brought in cases of equipment including a drogue chute which will trail behind the C-47 to keep it steady. No-one wants to damage this historic war bird.
Watching the operation with a smile and a tear is 85-year-old Duncan Miller. It is his C-47 he's owned and flown her for decades.
He settled into the pilot's seat to talk about his gift.
“I felt that I needed, that it belonged in a permanent home because it's part of our history,” he says.
During World War II more than 10,000 C-47's were built. Crews love them for their strength and reliability.
On Wednesday, the C-47, serial number 42-92990, proudly takes her last flight, even if it isn't under her own power.
It would have cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to make the C-47 fly again, and it's too big to put on a truck. So a lift from a helicopter was the only answer. The National Guard plans that lift for between eleven and noon Wednesday.
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