This is the place where the majority of the warbird (aircraft that have survived military service) discussions will take place. Specialized forums may be added in the new future
Fri Jan 13, 2006 6:20 am
As a young'un growing up in Seattle in the 70s and 80s, there was never that big of a warbird scene there. I am guilty of, as soon as I got my license, making the 2.5 hour drive to Portland -- only to see the apocryphal 'bomber gasoline' that was pictured in one of my books on the B-17.
I made that trip probably 4 or 5 times while I lived up there, and always dreamed that I could buy that thing off the top of the gas station and make it my own warbird.
Fri Jan 13, 2006 1:39 pm
So does this mean he has a CG-4?
And when you say "vintage copter," I think R-4. Does he have any?
He restored 1 CG-4 for Fort Rucker plus 2 R-4s for them and the 2nd CG-4 he did for the AF Museum. He restored and had 5 or 6 other vintage military copters and had a small museum at his airstrip but everything is at Evergreen now. These included a Bell OH13E, Hiller OH23B, Sikorsky H-19, Bell HTL-3 (VMO-6 Korea combat vet), Sikorsky S-51 and another that went to Ft Rucker along with the CG-4-R-4s and a couple others.
Sat Jan 14, 2006 12:29 am
As far as the Evergreen museum, If you want to meet Stan Richardson, and talk to him - he works on Sundays. He flew P-38's, got shot down, escaped, came back to fly P-51's, went on to fly F-86's in Korea. A really neat guy with a lot of interesting stories. We also have a guy who flew 30 missions in a B-17 in the ETO, as well as a guy who flew P-61's. And that's just on Sundays.
Sat Jan 14, 2006 2:26 pm
Capt Stan Richardson and ground crew 338th Fighter Squadron
P-38J CL*X s/n 42-67303
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