When I was a kid a guy named Paul Booth told me a story about the boneyards. He said that Jesse Stallings of Nashville and founder of Capital Airways, hired him and 3 other guys to go out there and buy and bring back 4 BT-13's.
They took the train from Nashville and after a couple of days they called Jesse back and asked "how do we narrow this search down there are thousands of BT's out there?" Jese said,"Well I dont want any Wright engines, just the Pratt's, and delete the ones that have the rear plywood fuselage and any wood control surfaces, or wood anywhere." After this they still had a couple hundred serial numbrs on their clipboard.
They then decided that anything that had rough fabric, or the canopy left open, flat tire, anything whatsoever would be off the list. They still had dozens, so they checked the perfect ones and if the battery was dead, they scratched them off. The final deciding factor was if the battery was good, the fuel tanks were full and they could fly them home without any work whatsoever. He said they paid about $50 bucks apiece for them!
Last edited by
marine air on Thu Feb 22, 2007 12:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.