runninwild wrote:
I am currently working as a consultant for the National WWII Museum and can update everyone on the status of the B-17 projects. Due to the time schedule for the display, airframe 44-83387 is not coming here. There was just too much work to complete for the short schedule. "My Gal Sal", 41-9032, is here and will be displayed in the Freedom Pavilion:The Boeing Center scheduled for opening on January 11, 2013. I am currently working on strengthening of the lift points as it is our intention to display "The Gal" in a combat configuration. She will be suspended in the air inside the pavilion, fully armed and crewed, with the bomb bay open dropping a stick of bombs. She never got a chance to fight, but it is our intention to show what she could do. There are some rather extensive mods necessary, particularly to the bulkhead 7, where she will be suspended from. Mr. Ready and his people did a remarkable job, but it was never their intention to hang the aircraft. For safety reasons, I am replacing bulkhead 7 and strengthening the entire area. Remember, people will be walking underneath the aircraft while it is on display. After the structural mods are complete we will mock up and fit check the entire airframe, then disassemble it for transportation to the Museum. At present, the aircraft is in a warehouse for the mods. 4 other aircraft are scheduled for display with The Gal, a B25J that has been converted to a PBJ configuration, a F4U-4 Corsair, a TBM Avenger, and an SBD Dauntless. I can't tell you how much fun it is working on these aircraft. I even got to meet a Corsair pilot last month. He was 90 years old, but he acted like he was 19 when he saw our Corsair. He was soooooo cool!
There must be a tremendous amount of work taking place on the aformentioned aircraft to get them ready for the new pavillion opening in January. How much work is being done to the b-25 to get it ready for display? Is the SBD the same aircraft that has been at the museum for awhile or is it the Lake Michigan bird recovered a couple three years ago? I know there would be alot of hoops to jump thru and much red tape but how sweet would it be if the museum could work out a deal with the USAF to get the B-24 from Barksdale before it rots away. I'm sure the USAF would like to see the Liberator preserved even if it means giving it to an organization like the Natl Museum of WW2. What a great addition it would make to the museum's collection.