"Brad Z" wrote in message news:doyYb.340879
That's it, John! All these years I had been wondering what kind of bird
she
was. The roll down windows and wooden wheel with chain drive stuck out in
my mind as "really neat". I can attest that this plane resulted in the
creation of at least one pilot.
That's neat -- I suspect the list of pilots created by those sightseeing
flights is long and distinguished! Our conversation got my interest going,
and I had to dig out the logbook from the attic. We used to run Willie and
a Cherokee Six, and there would be literally hundreds of folks in line.
That Cherokee Six was a sweetheart, but when you'd get down to the last
couple of rounds in the tank, Tony (the guy running the booth), would always
find someone weighing about 325 to go in the third row seat, and your CG
would be somewhere out on the elevator! When it got untenable, we'd grab a
Douglas between flights, and do a couple of rounds with that, knocking off
32 pax at a whack. Helped keep the lines cut down. But having said all
that, I now have to offer a couple of corrections. Turns out Willie was a
model SM-8A, [which is not the same as a Detroiter], with a Lycoming R-680
engine. All my time is logged as an SM-8A, but I recall a lot of
discussions about that back then. Some folks said she was a Detroiter but
SM-8A was just the model number, others said different things, but the basic
problem was that no one really knew, and back then there was no internet to
quick check the info [Al hadn't thought it up yet!! :-)] The current
registration database for N205W lists the type as SM-8A, and also lists the
year of manufacture as 1930.
JG
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