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WARBIRDS
Try
flying in these vintage combat aircraft
by
James C. Allen
In
a quiet corner of the Hampton Roads Executive Airport
in Suffolk, the pea-green Lockheed "Lady"
C60A Lodestar of the Old Dominion squadron of the Commemorative
Air Force sits quietly waiting for her next mission.
Her dual, nine-cylinder radial engines drip oil as they
have for nearly 60 years, though they no longer shuttle
paratroopers behind enemy lines or help to patrol the
U.S. shores looking for German U-boats.
These
days, the Lady Lodestar is a living piece of history.
"We are a true flying museum," says Col. Ed
Lucas, squadron leader of the Chesapeake-based Old Dominion
squadron of the CAF. "When we go to an air show,
people can walk up and touch it and feel the hot oil,
just like they could have back during WWII."
Giving
people that experience while preserving the aviation
history of World War II is what the Commemorative Air
Force is all about, says Lucas. Whether it is a ride
in the Lodestar's co-pilot seat or in the rear gun turret
of a B-17, the Midland, Texas-based CAF has spent more
than 40 years keeping the thrill of these planes alive.
Like
the other CAF squadrons, the two Virginia-based squadrons
give shelter and maintenance to a handful of CAF planes.
Besides the Lady Lodestar, the Old Dominion squadron
also keeps an L-5, the military version of a Piper Cub
trainer. The Manassas-based National Capitol squadron
maintains an L-5 and SR-13 trainer.
Bill
Douglas, the National Capitol squadron leader, says
people looking for some regular seat-of-the-pants excitement
should consider joining one of the CAF squadrons. "One
of the advantages you get as a member [of the CAF] is
that when there is space, you get to fly at the cost
of your membership," he says. That is pretty often,
he added, noting that at the group's monthly meetings
pilots let everyone know when they are taking the planes
up for a check run so that interested members can join
them.
There
are two levels of membership. The cheapest is a friend
of the squadron, which costs just $35, but does not
come with flying privileges. The free flight time comes
with paying a $200 tax-deductible annual membership
fee. Besides flight liberties, full members immediately
become commissioned colonels in the CAF, as well, putting
them on equal rank with all other CAF members.
Members
with pilot licenses can take things even further, Douglas
says. By paying a one-time sponsorship fee, pilots can
fly the planes on a regular basis, including monthly
check runs. Sponsorships do not come cheaply, however.
It costs $1,500 for the L-5s and $3,500 for either the
National Capitol's
BT-13 or the Old Dominion's Lodestar.
Still, it is a unique alternative to maintaining or
renting a ommonplace Cessna 152. "For some guys,
rather than owning their own plane, they pay the sponsorship
on the CAF plane and get their flying time in a World
War II aircraft," Douglas says. "A couple
of guys are airline pilots who just do it for the love
of flying the old iron."
Those
with more modest expectations might consider the CAF's
ride programs. Given space availability, rides on the
planes go for anywhere from $75 for a 20- to 30-minute
ride in an L-5, to $150 for a chauffeured trip in either
the BT-13 or the Lodestar. (The Old Dominion squadron
expects to receive approval from the CAF headquarters
to provide rides to paying customers by early spring.)
A trip in the Arizona squadron's B-17 at the National
Capitol's air show in Manassas July 9-17 runs as much
as $350 per person for as many as five paying passengers.
Rides can be good gift ideas as well. "An exciting
bonus for some outstanding employees might be that their
company gives three to five of them a ride in a B-17,"
Douglas says.
Regardless
of whether it is a ride as a member, as a paying customer
or as a full-fledged pilot, Lucas said the planes provide
the kind of thrills and romance that is hard to replicate
in today's aircraft. "A lot of people ride with
us because it's an experience," says Col. Ed Lucas
of the Old Dominion squadron. "You really get a
feel of what the paratroopers must have felt as they
flew in this plane."
Return
to Virginia Business -April 2002
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