Savvy Savage. and his Durable Douglas. by Frederick A. Johnsen 18 JULY 2016 PHOTO BY SCOTT SLOCUM

Similar documents
BERLIN EXPRESS 2 0 F E B R U A R Y

Lifetime. Love Affair

(Review X-Model and V-Model)

Martin Aircraft Specifications 1998 The Glenn L. Martin Aviation Museum

RESTRICTED AN 01 -SEC - 2 PILOT'S FLIGHT OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS FOR ARMY MODELS. B-24D and J

Commitment to Innovation Leads Fairchild International to Launch New AC Scoop Powered by Baldor Products

Before you build that scale model a few things to consider

CASE STUDY: Designing In Long Term Reliability and Fuel Efficiencies with Airtomic Ducting Solutions

Airacobra. Bell s Controversial

Tamiya 1/48 th Doug Barbier

Must-See Airplanes at EAA AirVenture

The equipment manufacturing division of one of the

American Bomber Aircraft Development In World War 2 By William Norton READ ONLINE

Saberwing Aircraft Kit

What You Need at the Flying Field

Honoring the Korean War Mustangs. by Jim Busha PAUL BOWEN

Mathematics of Flight. Distance, Rate and Time

RoR Step-by-Step Review * B-17G Flying Fortress 1-72 Revell Kit Review

The following slideshow and talk were presented at the Uber Elevate Summit on April 25 th, The text included here is an approximate transcript

The low wing Cessna 170 a great idea that didn t fly

Test of. Boeing MH-47G Chinook. Produced by Area-51 Simulations

ATC/CCF First Class Cadets. First Class Cadet Activity

NASA centers team up to tackle sonic boom 18 March 2014, by Frank Jennings, Jr.

Sub-Stratosphere Ship

Introduction. Fuselage/Cockpit

NORTHWEST HELICOPTERS. UH-1H & UH-1HPlus

Boeing B-17-Flying Fortress - Warbird Tech Vol. 7 By Frederick A Johnsen READ ONLINE

POTEZ COMBAT MONOPLANE

CHOOSING THE DESIGN OF YOUR AIRCRAFT

Name: Scout Troop: Patrol:

MrRCSound Sound Generator. Version 4.1 for RC Aircraft/Cars/Trucks

Bell 206B OH-58A Kiowa & JetRanger

When. The power and precision of USAF s F-15E Strike Eagles starts with the Fourth Fighter Wing.

Serving Southern Ohio, Northern Kentucky and Eastern Indiana

Charles H. Zimmerman promoted his Flying Pancake design from 1933 to 1937 while working for the

/72 PBM-5 Mariner USN

Hasegawa F-86 Sabre in 1/48 Scale by Mike Hanlon

NAVAIR Depot North Island completes CH-53 in record time to help Marines make deployment

Times are approximate, since I am flying the airplane after rebuild. 60 hours since new prop was made specifically for this airplane by McCauley.

TRAINERS PIPER PROVEN

To provide exceptional aircraft turbine engine services through our commitment to quality and safety while exceeding our customers expectations.

(Note: copyrighted material provided for your viewing pleasure. Not to be copied or reproduced. Thank you!)

1/6 Scale Waco SRE ARF

THE KIDDIE HAWK AIR ACADEMY AND THE LIVING LEGENDS OF AVIATION

JULY/AUGUST. July/August Dakota Territory Air Museum s P-47 Update

User Guide. Vought F2G "Super" Corsair. ... print your plane www. 3DPrintedKits.com. Scale ~ 1:6.6 Wingspan 1.9m/75in

Judging StandardS july 24, 2017

Jet Provost Design & Development. First Came The Piston Provost:

Building and flying a 1930s dream

Messerschmitt 262A-1a For Microsoft Flight Simulator 2004

HOOI KOK SENG Fish and Vegetable Seller

2018 NCRS Convention

Boeing B-47 Stratojet USER MANUAL. Virtavia B-47E Stratojet DTG Steam Edition Manual Version 2

Building a Mick Reeves 1/4.5 scale Hurricane. Instalment 1

X-Hangar's Noorduyn Norseman Mk IV Review

Test of. Bell UH-1Y Venom. Produced by Area-51 Simulations

BASIC REQUIREMENTS TO BE A DEALER. RV Trade Digest, January 1995

Hasegawa 1/48 scale Messerschmitt bf-109e3 Condor Legion By Mike Hanlon

Reducing Landing Distance

INDEX. Preflight Inspection Pages 2-4. Start Up.. Page 5. Take Off. Page 6. Approach to Landing. Pages 7-8. Emergency Procedures..

OWN YOUR BUSINESS. DRIVE YOUR FUTURE.

For Immediate Release

An I.P.M.S./ M.O.S.S. Publication October 2014 Volume 6 Issue 8 I N S I D E T H I S I S S U E

Exploration 2: How Do Rotorcraft Fly?

Test of. Cessna CT-182T Turbo Skylane HD-series Produced by Carenado

The BUGATTI 100P Replica Propeller(s) By Jan Carlsson January 2012

ACES WWII Rules 2015

Classic Automotive Repair. One Great Mechanic

P40 USAAF/RAAF Operations in Australia

Convair B-36: America s Big Stick

This manual covers all color schemes Although it only shows one color scheme, the aircraft are the same This manual is for reference to the actual

CORROSION DETECTION:

Restoring the Strategic Air & Space Museum s E-4B Model

JIM BEDE ADDS TWO HOMEBUILTS TO HIS LINE - THE BD-5J AND THE ALL NEW BD-6

Best Practices for Managing Fleet Battery Costs By Zena Johnson, PulseTech Products Corp.

Removing your Two-blade Hartzell HC-12 (?) 20 prop off a Franklin Engine (Or How do I change the prop cylinder O-rings! )

JOHN COOPER WORKS TUNING MINI COOPER S

The Sky Screamer makes it easy and affordable to develop

EAST WEST HELICOPTER AND PANTERRA HELI SUPPORT VAST EXPERTISE COMBINES TO

XB-47. The XB

Apparent fuel leak, Boeing , G-YMME

The Ex-Hamish Moffat, D. B Madeley 1923 Crossley Bugatti Type 23 Brescia Chassis No. CM 1614 Engine No. 16 Registration PD 8180

Mustang MASTERS CRIPES A MIGHTY DADDY S GIRL RED DOG

The AMA History Project Presents: Biography of HAROLD (HAL) PARENTI

Instruction Manual. Twin 70MM EDF

The R101 Disaster. The R101 Disaster

Avoiding Crashes 5 tips to save your RC airplane! Sep 03, 2011 By Gerry Yarrish

The Next Meeting is Saturday June 18, 2016 at. 6:30 PM at the Hermon D. Lowery Field. Officers. AMA Chapter #755. June, 2016

WHISPERAIRCRAFT.COM THE NEW

Air Tractor's commitment to improving our aircraft makes it the best choice around.

Volume XV, Advanced Edition 14 n2y.com. Soon you may see a plane on the road or a car in the sky. One

WHY TWO SPOOLS ARE BETTER THAN ONE: EQUIPPING OUR MILITARY WITH THE BEST TECHNOLOGY FOR EXISTING AND EMERGING THREATS

ROTARY VERSUS RECIPROCATING ENGINES

SpaceShipOne. Burt Rutan/SCALED Composites. A Paul G. Allen Project. HigherFlights Foamie Gliders by Jeff Rutan. Recommended for Grades 4-8/Ages 9+

Assembly and Operating Manual. SPECIFICATION Length inch (640mm) Wing Span inch (705mm) Flying Weight oz (330g)

Lightning. Copyright : The Trustees of the Royal Air Force Museum, 2012 Page 1

WAYPOINTS. March President s Message. Presidents message

G SERIES 3 ROUGH-TERRAIN FORKLIFTS

FLIGHT MANUAL OPERATIONS HANDBOOK COMMONWEALTH AIRCRAFT CORPORATION CA-13 BOOMERANG. and. for

P.O. BOX 246 Franksville, WI USA Ph Fax

Transcription:

Savvy Savage and his Durable Douglas by Frederick A. Johnsen 18 JULY 2016 PHOTO BY SCOTT SLOCUM

www.warbirds-eaa.org 19

FREDERICK A. JOHNSEN Three flat plates extend from the A-26 when the bomb bay doors open, baffling turbulence before bomb release. Owner Tim Savage inspected the plates, just one of many military hardware artifacts this Invader retained for decades. It s one thing to restore a warbird to pristine wartime condition; it s another to leave it alone because it never lost the wartime gear. Tim Savage and his son, Job, brought their Douglas A-26 Invader bomber to AirVenture 2015 with a healthy dose of vintage equipment still installed. Future restoration efforts will complete the picture, but the rugged authenticity of the bomber is already apparent. Tim learned of the availability of the A-26 as part of the estate of the late pioneering warbird collector David Tallichet. Its postwar history includes a stint with the Nicaraguan air force starting in the 1960s, when another warbird collector traded it to that country for old fighters. Tim says the Nicaraguans kept the A-26 s bomb bay intact, with vintage racks, bomb shackles, and other gear untouched. This is a rare find, since so many postwar, civilianized A-26 fire bombers and executive transports received drastic bomb bay modifications to suit them to their new roles. Subsequent owner David Tallichet acquired this A-26 and others in a 1977 deal that gave the Nicaraguan air force some practical Cessna 172s for training. Tallichet kept the GI hardware in the bomber, and now Tim Savage is adding even more military machinery to the A-26 each off-season. The originality of this Invader becomes apparent when Tim opens the bomb bay doors to reveal original wind baffles that extend into the slipstream to block disruptive airflow and enhance the action of the bombs as they fall. A look inside the bay shows replica bombs hanging from the shackles. This isn t your father s executive A-26. Prolific and talented Douglas Aircraft designer Ed Heinemann already held the patent for that company s earlier A-20 Havoc twin-engine bomber when the U.S. Army Air Forces signaled interest in a new bomber to improve on the A-20 s performance, in view of what was unfolding in the European war by late 1940. Heinemann s earlier Douglas designs incorporated rounded wingtips and tail surfaces typical of the prewar 1930s. The angular A-26 marked a distinct aesthetic and aeronautical departure for Heinemann s team, defining the appearance of straight-wing Douglas designs for years to come. It s a look that has been kind to the A-26; threequarters of a century after it was drawn on paper, the A-26 still conveys speed even when parked and chocked. Tim is patient in his plans for the A-26. After the 2015 air show season, it was delivered to John Lane s award-winning Airpower Unlimited warbird restoration shop in Jerome, Idaho. John detailed the 20 JULY 2016

bomber s authentic six-gun nose with the introduction of dummy.50-caliber machine gun barrels, cooling jackets, and shrouds. In future off-seasons, operational General Electric power gun turrets will be re-introduced to this airframe. For now, the dome of the top turret mounts a pair of barrels for effect. And then it was time for maintenance and upgrades. This Invader has had a lot of hands on it in the last 70-plus years, and John started to notice things like mismatched bolts in a few places and an engine that drank 15 more gallons of avgas an hour than its counterpart on the other wing. Winter downtime saw the installation of engine carburetors with matching efficiencies, and the mounting of engine pre-oilers to distribute lubricant before starting the Pratt & Whitney R-2800s. Additionally, oil shut-off valves now help keep oil from pooling in the bottom cylinders and may make this A-26 cleaner on the ramp when it comes to oil spots. With characteristic thoroughness and thoughtfulness, John and his crew cycled the A-26 s landing gear with the bomber supported by heavy-duty jacks, as the warbird experts worked to make the gear retraction and extension even better than before. The nose wheel of the A-26 retracts first, turning 90 degrees as it moves rearward, presenting a flat surface to the wind before hiding ingeniously inside the compact fuselage. The result of the winter hiatus in Idaho is a mix of cosmetic embellishments like the nose gun barrels and maintenance accomplishments that make this A-26 that much better for the 2016 flying season. It s an ongoing restoration project and an ongoing maintenance program, John explains. John Lane has revived other warbirds that have been significantly altered over the years by previous civilian operators. The largely stock nature of Tim Savage s A-26 is a treat. I think it s cool because it s an airplane that hasn t been all butchered up, John says. I m surprised it s still a single-control airplane. Many flying Invaders have a second set of flight controls added to the cockpit; that s one alteration owner Tim contemplates as he learns to pilot his bomber in the future. John Lane s work, like that of so many who embrace warbirds, is much more than hours on a time SCOTT SLOCUM

During its winter stay at John Lane s Airpower Unlimited in Jerome, Idaho, Tim Savage s A-26 received dummy blast tubes and machine gun barrels in its unusual six-gun nose. Every touch enhances its wartime appearance. FREDERICK A. JOHNSEN sheet; it s a passion for history. These airplanes are very critical to keep flying, he says. John offers Tim suggestions on where money can best be spent to the greatest effect. It s about money spent in the right place, John says. Over the years for several customers, John has used that money to deliver award-winning restorations, including four EAA Golden Wrench awards for three Corsairs and a TBM Avenger. At his Airpower Unlimited shop, John s crew typically consists of eight people, craftspeople he appreciates: TYSON RININGER PHOTOS You re only as good as the people you employ, he says. Tim Savage previously owned a B-25J when his son, Job, was much younger. After selling the B-25, Tim perceived a sense of lost opportunity for Job. Tim found the A-26 and bought it as a family project. He kept it a secret from Job until the day it arrived. Job mans a table offering custom T-shirts and souvenirs for sale at planeside. His entrepreneurial spirit is a family trait; Tim is growing his successful computer consulting business along with mentoring and supporting young entrepreneurs from his location in Huntington, Indiana. Tim also brings a sense of balance to his latest warbird project. He says he may only make three or so air shows each season. This has dual effects it keeps the bomber from becoming an obsession that intrudes on family time, while the leisurely schedule ensures the plane and its systems will not wear out any time soon. Nonetheless, just to hedge for the future, Tim says he hunts for Invader parts. I ve been buying everything I can find, he says. Tim s Invader is full of surprises. While many A-26s received spar modifications that involved reinforcing the carry-through structure in the fuselage, Tim s Silver Dragon has barely visible external straps running along the undersurfaces of the wing. Research indicates the U.S. Air Force did this modification for some Central American air forces at Albrook Air Force Base, Panama, in 1964 and 1965; Silver Dragon may be the only flying Invader with this adaptation. Tim satisfies FAA requirements to inspect the wing structure with an alternative method of compliance (AMOC) that includes dye checking the carry-through structure to ensure cracks are not propagating. Talking with Tim, one gets a sense of his patient passion for this sometimes-overlooked World War II bomber. While many were converted for civilian use in the decades following the war, Tim says he can only count about a dozen flying examples today, with others slumbering in static displays or storage. When he first inspected Silver Dragon, he was impressed with its largely unmodified nature. The airframe called out for preservation and restoration. I feel an obligation to do that, he says, because this Invader is one of the few that wasn t severely modified as a surplus opportunity. I like to take old things and make them new, he says. I 22 JULY 2016

PHOTO BY SCOTT SLOCUM

Father and son at EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2015. BRADY LANE A-26 INVADER HISTORY The Douglas A-26 Invader was the inspired result of discussions between the Army Air Forces and Douglas Aircraft officials in late 1940. Feedback from the European war fueled AAF desires for a new bomber to outperform the A-20 and eventually replace other twin-engine bombers in service. The design team of Ed Heinemann crafted the XA-26 to meet an early AAF goal of mounting a huge 75-mm cannon. That notion went away, but the basic lines of the bomber remained essentially unchanged through production, save for variations on removable noses for bombing or gunnery with differing configurations. One airframe change of note was the raising of the cockpit canopy above the fuselage line to give the pilots better lateral vision over the engine nacelles. The Invader s combat debut in the summer of 1944 foretold a time when the A-26 would replace the A-20, B-25, and B-26 Marauder as the only twin-engine propeller-driven bomber in the Air Force. That distinction would have to wait until war s end, but by 1948, the withdrawal of the remaining Martin B-26s saw the A-26 given the designation B-26 in postwar nomenclature. B-26 Invaders served in Korea, and variants brought war to the enemy in southeast Asia in the 1960s. Foreign air forces and covert American operators leveraged the sleek Invader for many years. In civilian service, A-26s became fast executive aircraft modified by companies like On Mark. Others were given retardant tanks for firefighting. One even flew with a fuselage-mounted jet engine as an airborne test bed in the infancy of jet power. TYSON RININGER The A-26 did more than just look fast. With a cruising speed of 284 mph, the A-26 bested combat-equipped A-20s by around 15 mph; B-25Js by more than 50 mph; and Martin B-26Gs by about 70 miles an hour. And the Invader did this at greater range than any of the other three bombers.

FREDERICK A. JOHNSEN Ex-Nicaraguan Air Force A-26B at Oshkosh, July 2015. think it s an undersung airplane. And that restoration will get done when it gets done; no timeline declarations are being made. It s a joke among some warbird restorers, when asked how long a project will take, to always reply: About a year. That year gets repeated over and over each time the question is asked during the many years the project actually consumes. For Tim and the handful of helpers working on Silver Dragon, the pressure is off. When the bomber is on the circuit, and not at Airpower Unlimited, There s only about five of us working on this plane, and we all have other jobs, Tim explains. Nor is he impatient to get typecertificated as a pilot in his new bomber. Tim s intention is to have John install dual controls this vintage Invader is one of the few that did not receive that mod decades ago. After the dual controls are in place he will begin the process of learning the A-26 s handling traits with a qualified pilot in the other seat. I don t feel the ego pressure to quickly fly a plane that I own, Tim says. It may take me a couple years to feel comfortable in the airplane. The colorful dragon face on the nose of Tim Savage s A-26 was scarcely a week old when the bomber taxied onto the grass parking area at Oshkosh last summer. But the bomber itself bridges seven decades. Decades that pretty much left the Invader alone, a surviving witness to a bygone era. by Jean Barbaud http://jeanbarbaud.blogspot.com www.warbirds-eaa.org 27