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The Lodestar is interesting, can't tell from this angle if it is an early or later version (the early version was little more than a "stretched" Super Electra/Hudson.) Are any pictures of the interior available?
Earl Reinert told me he got this plane when it was abandoned at Midway Airport (Chicago) around 1961. He sold the engines and brought it to the Victory Air Museum, where he painted it in RAF markings, although he left the registration on the lower wing. When I saw it, the airline interior was a bit shabby but intact. Note the missing flap fairings; they got crunched when an ultralight ran into it! He did mention to me that it had the earlier 12-volt electrical system; he wanted to hook a car battery to it and turn on the landing lights at night. I helped him repaint it with oil-based house paint (thinned with gasoline

) and he nearly ripped me a new one for deviating from the original camouflage pattern on the nose! I fixed it and added the serial BW409 under the tail.
Frankly, I had hoped the plane was going to be restored and put in a museum; other than having engines hung on it (and not having 55-gallon drums supporting the vertical stabilizers) it doesn't seem that much better off than it was at the VAM...
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All right, Mister Dorfmann, start pullin'!
Pilot: "Flap switch works hard in down position."
Mechanic: "Flap switch checked OK. Pilot needs more P.T." - Flight report, TB-17G 42-102875 (Hobbs AAF)