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flybywire
January 22nd 09, 10:38 PM
Subject: Oldest Boeing Aircraft



Oldest Boeing Airliner now In flying condition.



This was as it should be - passengers in closed cabin, pilot in
open cockpit so he will stay awake.

The airplane is in Spokane, WA , and is the oldest flying Boeing
Aircraft. After 8 years of repair and rebuilding and 8,000 hours of toil the
Boeing 40C rolled out last winter as a finished airplane. They had to wait a
few weeks for the snow to melt to fly this baby. They received their
Standard Airworthiness Certificate from the FAA and completed the engine
pre-oil and fuel flow tests for the first of the taxi tests.

Facts for the Boeing 40 project:221 gallons of dope/reducer and
120 yards of 102 ceconite fabric. 12 gallons of polyurethane paint for the
sheet metal. The wings have 33,000 individual parts in them. The airplane
weighs 4080 lbs empty, has a gross weight of 6075 lbs. It is 34 ft long and
13 feet tall with a wing span of 44 feet.

Wing loading is 10 lbs per sq ft and power loading is 10 Pounds
per HP. It should cruise at 115 mph using 28 GPH, and 32 GPH at 120 mph. It
carries 120 gallons of fuel in three tanks.350 - 2 inch brushes were used to
apply 6 gallons of West Systems epoxy, and 181 rolls of paper towels for
cleanup.

There were a total of 62 volunteers who worked on the project to
some degree. 21 of the volunteers did a significant amount of work, and 9 of
the volunteers worked continuously during the 8 year project.

David Hartung[_5_]
January 23rd 09, 02:18 AM
flybywire wrote:
>
>
> Subject: Oldest Boeing Aircraft
>
>
>
> Oldest Boeing Airliner now In flying condition.
>
>
>
> This was as it should be - passengers in closed cabin, pilot
> in open cockpit so he will stay awake.
>
> The airplane is in Spokane, WA , and is the oldest flying
> Boeing Aircraft. After 8 years of repair and rebuilding and 8,000 hours
> of toil the Boeing 40C rolled out last winter as a finished airplane.
> They had to wait a few weeks for the snow to melt to fly this baby. They
> received their Standard Airworthiness Certificate from the FAA and
> completed the engine pre-oil and fuel flow tests for the first of the
> taxi tests.
>
> Facts for the Boeing 40 project:221 gallons of dope/reducer
> and 120 yards of 102 ceconite fabric. 12 gallons of polyurethane paint
> for the sheet metal. The wings have 33,000 individual parts in them. The
> airplane weighs 4080 lbs empty, has a gross weight of 6075 lbs. It is 34
> ft long and 13 feet tall with a wing span of 44 feet.
>
> Wing loading is 10 lbs per sq ft and power loading is 10
> Pounds per HP. It should cruise at 115 mph using 28 GPH, and 32 GPH at
> 120 mph. It carries 120 gallons of fuel in three tanks.350 - 2 inch
> brushes were used to apply 6 gallons of West Systems epoxy, and 181
> rolls of paper towels for cleanup.
>
> There were a total of 62 volunteers who worked on the project
> to some degree. 21 of the volunteers did a significant amount of work,
> and 9 of the volunteers worked continuously during the 8 year project.

Pictures?

David1948
January 23rd 09, 03:18 AM
On Thu, 22 Jan 2009 20:18:04 -0600, David Hartung wrote:

> flybywire wrote:
>>
>>
>> Subject: Oldest Boeing Aircraft
>>
>>
>>
>> Oldest Boeing Airliner now In flying condition.
>>
>>
>>
>> This was as it should be - passengers in closed cabin, pilot
>> in open cockpit so he will stay awake.
>>
>> The airplane is in Spokane, WA , and is the oldest flying
>> Boeing Aircraft. After 8 years of repair and rebuilding and 8,000 hours
>> of toil the Boeing 40C rolled out last winter as a finished airplane.
>> They had to wait a few weeks for the snow to melt to fly this baby.
>> They received their Standard Airworthiness Certificate from the FAA and
>> completed the engine pre-oil and fuel flow tests for the first of the
>> taxi tests.
>>
>> Facts for the Boeing 40 project:221 gallons of dope/reducer
>> and 120 yards of 102 ceconite fabric. 12 gallons of polyurethane paint
>> for the sheet metal. The wings have 33,000 individual parts in them.
>> The airplane weighs 4080 lbs empty, has a gross weight of 6075 lbs. It
>> is 34 ft long and 13 feet tall with a wing span of 44 feet.
>>
>> Wing loading is 10 lbs per sq ft and power loading is 10
>> Pounds per HP. It should cruise at 115 mph using 28 GPH, and 32 GPH at
>> 120 mph. It carries 120 gallons of fuel in three tanks.350 - 2 inch
>> brushes were used to apply 6 gallons of West Systems epoxy, and 181
>> rolls of paper towels for cleanup.
>>
>> There were a total of 62 volunteers who worked on the
>> project
>> to some degree. 21 of the volunteers did a significant amount of work,
>> and 9 of the volunteers worked continuously during the 8 year project.
>
> Pictures?

There is a website that documents the progress. Try Googling.

Zomby Woof[_3_]
January 23rd 09, 03:24 AM
http://www.antiqueairfield.com/features/boeing_model_40.html

Bob
January 23rd 09, 10:46 AM
On Thu, 22 Jan 2009 20:18:04 -0600, David Hartung >
wrote:

>flybywire wrote:
>>
>>
>> Subject: Oldest Boeing Aircraft
>>
>>
>>
>> Oldest Boeing Airliner now In flying condition.
>>
>>
>>
>> This was as it should be - passengers in closed cabin, pilot
>> in open cockpit so he will stay awake.
>>
>> The airplane is in Spokane, WA , and is the oldest flying
>> Boeing Aircraft. After 8 years of repair and rebuilding and 8,000 hours
>> of toil the Boeing 40C rolled out last winter as a finished airplane.
>> They had to wait a few weeks for the snow to melt to fly this baby. They
>> received their Standard Airworthiness Certificate from the FAA and
>> completed the engine pre-oil and fuel flow tests for the first of the
>> taxi tests.
>>
>> Facts for the Boeing 40 project:221 gallons of dope/reducer
>> and 120 yards of 102 ceconite fabric. 12 gallons of polyurethane paint
>> for the sheet metal. The wings have 33,000 individual parts in them. The
>> airplane weighs 4080 lbs empty, has a gross weight of 6075 lbs. It is 34
>> ft long and 13 feet tall with a wing span of 44 feet.
>>
>> Wing loading is 10 lbs per sq ft and power loading is 10
>> Pounds per HP. It should cruise at 115 mph using 28 GPH, and 32 GPH at
>> 120 mph. It carries 120 gallons of fuel in three tanks.350 - 2 inch
>> brushes were used to apply 6 gallons of West Systems epoxy, and 181
>> rolls of paper towels for cleanup.
>>
>> There were a total of 62 volunteers who worked on the project
>> to some degree. 21 of the volunteers did a significant amount of work,
>> and 9 of the volunteers worked continuously during the 8 year project.
>
>Pictures?

Here are a few I got last year at Boeing Field.

I think I'm in love...

Bob ^,,^

Peter Twydell
January 23rd 09, 11:55 AM
In message >, Bob
> writes
>On Thu, 22 Jan 2009 20:18:04 -0600, David Hartung >
>wrote:
>
>>flybywire wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> Subject: Oldest Boeing Aircraft
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Oldest Boeing Airliner now In flying condition.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> This was as it should be - passengers in closed cabin, pilot
>>> in open cockpit so he will stay awake.
>>>
>>> The airplane is in Spokane, WA , and is the oldest flying
>>> Boeing Aircraft. After 8 years of repair and rebuilding and 8,000 hours
>>> of toil the Boeing 40C rolled out last winter as a finished airplane.
>>> They had to wait a few weeks for the snow to melt to fly this baby. They
>>> received their Standard Airworthiness Certificate from the FAA and
>>> completed the engine pre-oil and fuel flow tests for the first of the
>>> taxi tests.
>>>
>>> Facts for the Boeing 40 project:221 gallons of dope/reducer
>>> and 120 yards of 102 ceconite fabric. 12 gallons of polyurethane paint
>>> for the sheet metal. The wings have 33,000 individual parts in them. The
>>> airplane weighs 4080 lbs empty, has a gross weight of 6075 lbs. It is 34
>>> ft long and 13 feet tall with a wing span of 44 feet.
>>>
>>> Wing loading is 10 lbs per sq ft and power loading is 10
>>> Pounds per HP. It should cruise at 115 mph using 28 GPH, and 32 GPH at
>>> 120 mph. It carries 120 gallons of fuel in three tanks.350 - 2 inch
>>> brushes were used to apply 6 gallons of West Systems epoxy, and 181
>>> rolls of paper towels for cleanup.
>>>
>>> There were a total of 62 volunteers who worked on the project
>>> to some degree. 21 of the volunteers did a significant amount of work,
>>> and 9 of the volunteers worked continuously during the 8 year project.
>>
>>Pictures?
>
>Here are a few I got last year at Boeing Field.
>
>I think I'm in love...
>
>Bob ^,,^
>
>
>
Looks really good.

Congratulations to Pemberton & Sons (and the not-sons in the photos on
the website) on a magnificent restoration.

Just like an overgrown Fox Moth, but not quite as pretty.

--
Peter

Ying tong iddle-i po!

flybywire
January 23rd 09, 05:21 PM
foe some reason they didn't attach
h
"David Hartung" > wrote in message
...
> flybywire wrote:
>>
>>
>> Subject: Oldest Boeing Aircraft
>>
>>
>>
>> Oldest Boeing Airliner now In flying condition.
>>
>>
>>
>> This was as it should be - passengers in closed cabin, pilot
>> in open cockpit so he will stay awake.
>>
>> The airplane is in Spokane, WA , and is the oldest flying
>> Boeing Aircraft. After 8 years of repair and rebuilding and 8,000 hours
>> of toil the Boeing 40C rolled out last winter as a finished airplane.
>> They had to wait a few weeks for the snow to melt to fly this baby. They
>> received their Standard Airworthiness Certificate from the FAA and
>> completed the engine pre-oil and fuel flow tests for the first of the
>> taxi tests.
>>
>> Facts for the Boeing 40 project:221 gallons of dope/reducer
>> and 120 yards of 102 ceconite fabric. 12 gallons of polyurethane paint
>> for the sheet metal. The wings have 33,000 individual parts in them. The
>> airplane weighs 4080 lbs empty, has a gross weight of 6075 lbs. It is 34
>> ft long and 13 feet tall with a wing span of 44 feet.
>>
>> Wing loading is 10 lbs per sq ft and power loading is 10
>> Pounds per HP. It should cruise at 115 mph using 28 GPH, and 32 GPH at
>> 120 mph. It carries 120 gallons of fuel in three tanks.350 - 2 inch
>> brushes were used to apply 6 gallons of West Systems epoxy, and 181 rolls
>> of paper towels for cleanup.
>>
>> There were a total of 62 volunteers who worked on the project
>> to some degree. 21 of the volunteers did a significant amount of work,
>> and 9 of the volunteers worked continuously during the 8 year project.
>
> Pictures?

Google