Dear Jerry: the story of this ex FAS FG-1D is very interesting. BuNr 92460, according to available pictures / registers, was actually FAS 217, derelict at Ilopango Airport, San Salvador, since the early 60s (I am surprised to read that you found a "207" below the paint layers (picture?), when the pictures showing the same aircraft still in FAS scheme arriving to the US shows a "217"?). It never fought during the El Salvador-Honduras War (July 14-18, 1969). I don´t have a record of the exact date in which it was "donated" and later installed at the Sikorsky Memorial, in a newspaper picture it says only "1969". The FAS paint scheme you correctly describe under several coats of painting, is the 1957-1961 scheme, so you can say with some certainty that this FG-1D did not operatte beyond 1961. There are several pictures of FAS 217 in the process of transportation from El Salvador to Bridgeport, "217" tail number in white clearly visible. On the other hand, FAS 207 (Bunr92690), which is the one that for sure was shown in Aircraft Magazine, is actually the last FG-1D that FAS owned, selling it in 1992 (Dan Wirth, Daron Yegani / registered N6143C). I was lucky enough to see this a/c during paint stripping days before being transported out of my country. FAS 207 had been derelict at Ilopango at least since the mid-60s, missing several parts, was put together during 1969 with parts from FAS 209 (a white-colored FG-1D grounded after a landing accident in 1968), burt not being able to fly. The 1957 vintage blue paint scheme with giant "FAS" lettering was stil in place, and it seems this a/c was used as decoy at Ilopango during the war. There are several pictures of FAS 207 after 1969. In the early 80s it was "donated" to a local park, got a new blue paint coat and sharkmouth. After some years, it brought back to Ilopango airport (around 1986), where it got the spurious number "FAS 220" and markings ("FAES" instead of "FAS"). So it is pretty sure that FAS 207 stayed in El Salvador. As I said, FAS 207 wasn´t operational either during the war (Only operational FG-1D were FAS 202, 204, 215, 219 and 220, all of them camouflaged; blue and grey schemes cited in many articles had not existed for more than half a decade). Hope this helps to complete the picture, I would really be interested in the number that was found on the tail, and, I wonder if the arrival date of this Corsair to Bridgeport is available...
Marco
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