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Donna Rae's Ride

Photography Aviation posted on Jun 17, 2009
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Description


For All: "Donna Rae", my aircraft nose art from two days ago, went over quite well. However, 5-6 folks asked to see the entire plane upon which she resides. ZOOM is a must:) This collage shows four of about six photos that I took last Sunday. Due to crowding, it was not possible to get a single picture of the entire airplane. The Twin Beech, is a US Navy SNB-5 and was built in Wichita, Kansas by Beech Aircraft Company in 1943. Today it resides at the Combat Air Museum (CAM) in Topeka, Kansas in a very crowded restoration hangar. This is a large hangar filled with partially completed or unrestored aircraft. Donna Rae's aircraft has been largely restored by a core group of four volunteers that spent several days a week for eight years on the project between 1992 and 2000. Quite a labor of love. OK, it used to be said this is a guy thing but some ladies/women/girls like it too :-) Don't forget, all the services and airlines have female pilots, crewmen and mechanics these days! ...... For Aviation Enthusiasts: The Model 18 was one of Beech Aircraft's most successful and longest running production designs. It was produced from 1937 until November 26, 1969. Some 18 commercial variants were built. The first flight took place on January 15, 1937. The Twin Beech Model 18 faced stiff competition from Lockheed's Electra Junior in the late 1930s but after the US's entry into WWII production soared in order to meet the needs of the US military for trainers and utility transports. All branches of the service flew versions of the Twin Beech. Of the nearly 10,000 Model 18s built, over 5,250 were for the US military and were used to train navigators (AT-7/SNB-2), gunners and bombardiers (AT-11/SNB-1), and pilots, and for transporting cargo and personnel (C-45/SNB-5/JRB) and for aerial photography and mapping (F-2). Navigator, Kansan, and Expeditor were all names used for versions of military Model 18s, but the most commonly used name was Twin Beech. In September 1962, all surviving military Model 18s became C-45s with different letter suffixes for different versions. The US Coast Guard stopped flying their JRBs in 1958. The US Air Force retired their C-45s in 1963. The US Navy/Marines retired theirs in 1972, and the US Army ended operations of the C-45 in 1976. Donna Rae's ride, her C-45, had a long list of assignments with the US Navy, the US Department of Agriculture and a couple of civilian owners. She came to the Combat Air Museum (CAM) in October 1988. TECHNICAL DATA (SNB-5) Type: Personnel transport for 6-8 pasengers Crew: Pilot, co-pilot Power Plant: Two 450hp (335.5kW) each Pratt & Whitney R-985 nine-cylinder, air cooled radial engines Dimensions: Span: 47 ft 8 in (14.53m) Length: 34 ft 2 in (10.41m) Height: 9 ft 2 in (2.79m) Wing Area: 349 sq ft (32.42sq m) Weights: Empty: 6,000 lbs (2,721.6kg) Gross: 9,300 lbs (4,218.5kg) Performance: Max speed: 225 mph (362km/h) Cruising speed: 129 mph (208km/h) Service ceiling: 24,900 ft (7,590m) Range: 1,250 miles (2,012km) Armament: None Thanks very much for stopping by. All the info above came from the sign in front of the aircraft pictured above. Only problem...ever try to cut and paste from a sign? LOL. Bill:)

Comments (21)


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lyron

2:39AM | Wed, 17 June 2009

Great shots!!

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anahata.c

2:49AM | Wed, 17 June 2009

beautiful Bill. A fine montage. And we can really see the size of this thing, as well as its big bear-like shape. I can see, from the thick broad body, that it was used for cargo & large numbers of personnel. And when we see the larger body, we see how metallic it was, how pervasively so. It's quite powerful. And your top right shot is stunning because you also caught the rafters, which somehow 'fit' a beast like this, and I don't know why. I think it's that planes this imposing shouldn't be seen under low, smooth ceilings: High rafters somehow 'continue the space' in a way low ceilings don't. A wonderful shot filled with lines both in the ceiling and in the propellers. And re. the restorers: It can take an art-restorer months to restore a Rembrandt painting; so it's no surprise it can take years to restore a massive thing like this. It's a labor of love, I'm sure. Wonderful details here...Boy, a few of you have really made me aware of the immense love & devotion that go into these airplane museums, and what stunning objects these planes really are, aside from the fact that they were used to save this country & europe, etc etc. Fine uploads.

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durleybeachbum

3:01AM | Wed, 17 June 2009

I think the pic of the prop particularly superb!

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gypsyflame

3:48AM | Wed, 17 June 2009

Beautiful plane....I don't know much about planes...only that I'm afraid to fly...but I do enjoy looking at them and learning about them...

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drace68

4:49AM | Wed, 17 June 2009

Thanks Bill. Wonderful and versatile airplane. Really appreciate all the data. Great post.

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jendellas

6:12AM | Wed, 17 June 2009

Interesting as usual, Bill. The plane looks quite fragile to me.

PD154

8:11AM | Wed, 17 June 2009

Good shot and a fine narative Bill, I do so enjoy reading your text, thanks!

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kansas

9:26AM | Wed, 17 June 2009

Super shots. Thanks for posting these and thanks for the info and specs.

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neiwil

11:21AM | Wed, 17 June 2009

Great shots and a storm of information....excellent!

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Buffalo1

11:39AM | Wed, 17 June 2009

Cool pics of a great plane,Bill!

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sandra46

11:46AM | Wed, 17 June 2009

excellent collage and fantastic info! You remarkably avoided to take people crowding around: did you kill them? ;D)

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flavia49

12:01PM | Wed, 17 June 2009

Wonderful collage and superlative info!!!!

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dbrv6

4:44PM | Wed, 17 June 2009

Great collage all great captures and well presented. Thanks for all the information.

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goodoleboy

4:51PM | Wed, 17 June 2009

Fine shots, taken under similar lighting conditions that I often encounter, in this collage, Bill! Hard to believe 10,000 Model 18s were built. Kind of reminds me of the plane Amelia Earhart piloted when she disappeared over the Pacific, oh so many decades ago. Hers was a Lockheed L-10E Electra. The hangar you describe sounds exactly like some of the ones, also with partially completed or unrestored aircraft, out at the Chino Planes of Fame complex.

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orig_buggy

5:30PM | Wed, 17 June 2009

excellent!!!

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elfin14doaks

8:25PM | Wed, 17 June 2009

Veryu cool air craft. Great shots.

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bimm3d

3:53AM | Thu, 18 June 2009

nice!!!

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MagikUnicorn

10:40AM | Thu, 18 June 2009

Excellent collage my friend...(Too Bad for STS-127) report to July

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auntietk

4:54PM | Thu, 18 June 2009

My favorites are top right and bottom left. I love the late-deco styling, the roundness, all that metal ... beautiful!

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npauling

9:42PM | Thu, 18 June 2009

Lovely captures and thank you for all the info. it is great to learn about everything.

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debbielove

9:19AM | Tue, 23 June 2009

It was chronically crowded in that hanger, wasn't it? But it was great to get up close and 'oily' with the planes! Another really fine collage, Bill. Impressive work..... Rob.


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