Matt Gunsch wrote:
it maybe a Kansas winter, but if you will note I said Arizona SUMMER, where the skins can get to over 130 Degrees, and it can be 110-115 in the shade. I have worked outdoors in 20 degree weather to 115 degrees.
it is not as comfortable as being in a hangar, but it can be done.
Mm...good point. It's pretty close here. Still, do ya'll get hail storms and tornadoes that frequently? ^_^;
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I notice that it mentions nothing of Tallichet who is the majority owner of the aircraft and it seems like that is a big secret for specific reasons and without being slanderous I think many of us know what those reasons are.
I've never even heard of Tallichet's involvement with the aircraft. Could you enlighten me?
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What is the actual reason that Boeing decided to kick Doc out in the cold? It really seems a bit strange that they had so much invested interest in the aircraft and now it is getting the boot. They sponsored the restoration of the Boeing Bee, the Stratoliner (twice). It seems a little strange that they wouldn't see this one through to completion. Is there something I am missing on why it was pushed out into the cold?
It says right there in the article: they needed the hangar. They've only got X number of hangars there, and Doc has been located in no less than three (yes, they had to move it to another hangar for a while at which point I was unable to work on it any further) different hangars at different times. When someone pays
them to do business, they've got no choice but to move Doc. They are a company and they've let enough people go as it stands. There's no reason why they should turn down work over a B-29. (I get the feeling some people might think they should have turned down work or something; some people have to put bread on their tables, though. In that light, a B-29 isn't nearly as important)
The Kansas Aviation Museum is about 1/4 a mile away from the previous hangar, so it isn't that big of a distance.
I do not believe that Boeing is sponsoring Doc's flying at all. They were just giving it a place to be restored & loaning some equipment. This is Boeing Wichita we're talking about, not Boeing Seattle. Just because they're the same corporation doesn't necessarily mean they both operate the same, or can even afford it! They
did sell their commercial division about a year ago, after all. They don't employ nearly as many people as they did when they first started on Doc, ergo, they don't make as much money either.
...of course, I may have this wrong, but that is what I understood it to be (and it's been a year since I checked).