Captain Texas wrote:
According to wikipedia-
On display
B-23 Dragon, s/n 39-0036 is on display at the McChord Air Museum in McChord AFB, Washington.
B-23 Dragon, s/n 39-0045 is on display at the Castle Air Museum in Atwater, California.
B-23 Dragon, s/n 39-0051 is on display at the Pima Air & Space Museum in Tucson, Arizona.
Mostly complete (Crash sites, etc.)
B-23 Dragon, s/n 39-052 is a largely complete wreck at Loon Lake, Idaho.
Under restoration
B-23 Dragon, s/n 39-0033 is under restoration to airworthiness by Pissed Away N747M LLC in Bellevue, Washington.
B-23 Dragon, s/n 39-0037 is under restoration at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio.
B-23 Dragon, s/n 39-0038 is under restoration at the 1941 Historical Aircraft Group in Geneseo, New York.
B-23 Dragon, s/n 39-0046 is under restoration to airworthiness by E. M. Luke in Franklin, Louisiana.
B-23 Dragon, s/n 39-0057 is under restoration to airworthiness by Fantasy of Flight in Polk City, Florida.
As mentioned on the previous page N777LW, 39-063 is not listed. Also not listed on Wiki is the UC-67 configured as an airliner on outdoor display at Quito, Ecuador. Formerly registered HC-APV is marked as TH-344 and is 39-031 (Cn/2717) here...more recent photos available if googled..
http://www.abpic.co.uk/photo/1262011/Quote:
I'm not certain if all the surviving B-23s are accounted for. Is N53253 really based in Louisiana, or is it just represented there on paper?
Probably just still existing in the registration, but there's always hope...

Edit, repaired link.