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![]() -- Cheers Dave Kearton |
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![]() "Dave Kearton" wrote in message ... Thats a replica, isn't it? I though that THE 'Spirit of St Louis' was in DC at the Smithsonian... Luke |
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Luke wrote:
"Dave Kearton" wrote in message ... Thats a replica, isn't it? I though that THE 'Spirit of St Louis' was in DC at the Smithsonian... Luke Gordon's response "The Replica we have of the Spirit is indeed a replica, by definition - i.e., a product built to represent a previous article, made by at least some of the original builders. Ours just finished a year-long ground up restoration and is in good enough shape that I would fly it away today. Everything works, even the periscope. After the fire in 1977, it took about four days before the workforce mobilized to rebuild. We moved to the other end of the park and took over the historic Ford Building, a holdover from the San Diego World Expo in the high art deco style. We currently have over 100 aircraft, many of which are original and historic - we have the real "Showtime" F-4 that Duke Cunningham used to down a MiG; we have "Gumdrop" the Apollo 9 Command Module. In addition to a large and comprehensive aircraft and missile collection (we have an Atlas ICBM, Tomahawk, etc.), we also have the third largest library in the county and our archives hold over half a million original photographs. Who knows how many blueprints, but it fills several rooms. The gem in the crown is our basement restoration and fabrication complex. As each aviation company in San Diego has passed into history, they all have brought their jigs, tools, and machines to our basement, where these industrial-weight anachronisms still meet up with their former operators as they roll out a new aircraft about once a year. Currently, we are in the final stages of building a Gee Bee racer and our P-26 is about 8 months from completion. We recently pulled our Wright Flyer out of the full-scale diorama on the display floor for a total restoration, so its in pieces on the basement floor. The average age of our large volunteer workforce is over 85, and 90% of the guys are retired from the local aircraft industry. We have Ryan employees, technicians from Consolidated, Convair, and Vought and several other companies - even Bowlus. At the crowded lunch table, its common to have 150 to 250 years of aviation experience swapping stories and sharing sandwiches. Its a fun place to work. " -- Cheers Dave Kearton |
#4
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![]()
Luke wrote:
"Dave Kearton" wrote in message ... Thats a replica, isn't it? I though that THE 'Spirit of St Louis' was in DC at the Smithsonian... Luke Gordon's response "The Replica we have of the Spirit is indeed a replica, by definition - i.e., a product built to represent a previous article, made by at least some of the original builders. Ours just finished a year-long ground up restoration and is in good enough shape that I would fly it away today. Everything works, even the periscope. After the fire in 1977, it took about four days before the workforce mobilized to rebuild. We moved to the other end of the park and took over the historic Ford Building, a holdover from the San Diego World Expo in the high art deco style. We currently have over 100 aircraft, many of which are original and historic - we have the real "Showtime" F-4 that Duke Cunningham used to down a MiG; we have "Gumdrop" the Apollo 9 Command Module. In addition to a large and comprehensive aircraft and missile collection (we have an Atlas ICBM, Tomahawk, etc.), we also have the third largest library in the county and our archives hold over half a million original photographs. Who knows how many blueprints, but it fills several rooms. The gem in the crown is our basement restoration and fabrication complex. As each aviation company in San Diego has passed into history, they all have brought their jigs, tools, and machines to our basement, where these industrial-weight anachronisms still meet up with their former operators as they roll out a new aircraft about once a year. Currently, we are in the final stages of building a Gee Bee racer and our P-26 is about 8 months from completion. We recently pulled our Wright Flyer out of the full-scale diorama on the display floor for a total restoration, so its in pieces on the basement floor. The average age of our large volunteer workforce is over 85, and 90% of the guys are retired from the local aircraft industry. We have Ryan employees, technicians from Consolidated, Convair, and Vought and several other companies - even Bowlus. At the crowded lunch table, its common to have 150 to 250 years of aviation experience swapping stories and sharing sandwiches. Its a fun place to work. " -- Cheers Dave Kearton |
#5
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![]() "Dave Kearton" wrote in message ... Thats a replica, isn't it? I though that THE 'Spirit of St Louis' was in DC at the Smithsonian... Luke |
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