The Travis AFB Heritage Center C-140A Jetstar located in Fairfield CA.
has been declared excess and will be scrapped if it is not transferred to another approved/vetted USAF museum. Parts are also available from the aircraft for other approved/vetted museums.
contact Rick Shea at the Travis AFB Heritage Center 707-424-5883
or if you want the whole aircraft contact USAF Museum,
mark.miller@us.af.milMore info and pictures also available from me, but I can't approve anything.
Sadly, the USAF is downsizing their aircraft collections on display. This is happening at many USAF Museums and Heritage Centers. Can't save them all, but maybe save some pieces from them.
History of aircraft:
Serial number 59-5958
Construction number 5010
It was delivered to the Air Force late in 1961. The construction number suggests it was the 10th production aircraft although there were 2 prototypes so it could be said it was the 12th JetStar built and the first for the Air Force.
It was assigned to 1867FCS (Facilities Checking Squadron) based at Clark AB in the Philippines. It was used for inspecting NAVAIDS throughout Southeast Asia until about September 1975. Having returned to the US it was with 1866FCS at Richards-Gebaur AFB, Mo, and in 1977 the squadron moved to Scott AFB, Il. The aircraft was one of 4 based at Scott until around 1988.
During the hostilities in Vietnam, 59-5958 and others were painted in the camo scheme which it then kept throughout its working life. The JetStars were replaced around 1988 with another jet designed for executive use, the Hawker Siddeley HS.125, designated C-29A. Flight Checking duties at some point passed to the FAA (the Hawkers were repainted into FAA colors) and these duties are today carried out with Bombardier Challenger and Learjet aircraft.
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