High Mileage
Just how many hours can you wring from an airplane? As the operators, mechanics, and parts suppliers who keep DC-3s in the air.
- By Mark Huber
- Air & Space magazine, May 2000
(Page 2 of 5)
Westbrook is proud of his low-overhead location and the fact that in 37 years he has never bought a single trade advertisement. People who operate DC-3s know where to find him. His company owns a single computer; Westbrook's wife uses it for billing. Standard's inventory of 150,000 parts is tracked on Kardex, a file card system akin to a library's card catalog and somehow appropriate for a 1930s-era parts inventory. "It works fine for us," he says.
After Boeing acquired McDonnell Douglas in 1997, it sent out a letter announcing termination of product support for the DC-3 and pointing operators to Standard. Eight years ago Standard bought Douglas' remaining DC-3 airframe parts inventory and tooling. "Thirty-three truckloads on a 20-foot bobtail truck," Westbrook says. He took everything: ailerons, elevators, wingtips, gas tanks, rudders, bearings, bolts, brackets, and washers. Over the years he has also acquired parts inventories from the air forces of Australia, Argentina, Canada, Denmark, France, and South Africa and has sold them back to South Africa and Australia (and repurchased some of those).
Standard counts a hundred active DC-3 clients (those who have purchased parts within the last six months) and a thousand inactive. They call from as far away as New Guinea. Business, Westbrook says, has never been better. He knows he picked a winner. "This is the best airplane ever made," he says. "If you give some of these smaller operators jets, they wouldn't know what to do with them. This airplane was designed so you could get to parts and replace them whole. It's like working on an old car."
From the beginning, Westbrook has stocked small, easily transportable parts--"Those are the things that wear out the fastest: bearings, bolts, and brackets," he says--and he figures his inventory will last for at least 10 more years. "We don't keep a lot of the large stuff, like stabilizers," says Westbrook. For those, the road leads to San Antonio.
Tradewinds Aircraft Supply got into the DC-3 business in the mid-1960s, when Trans Texas Airways dumped their DC-3s for Convairs. Tradewinds bought up Trans Texas' inventory of 22 aircraft and spares, then augmented that by purchasing a large DC-3 parts inventory from a Dallas broker. Today, Tradewinds sells DC-3 airframe parts "from nose to tail" worldwide, according to manager Richard Ormond. He stocks 20,000 line items and, like Standard, keeps track of it all on Kardex.
There are endless variants of and modifications to DC-3s--The military alone made more than 50 modifications to the C-47--and Ormond thought he had seen them all until a customer called looking for a left-hand aileron trim tab for a DC-3 then owned by Dow-Corning. Ormond patiently explained that DC-3s weren't made with left-hand trim tabs; in response, the customer sent him a photo. "They had the only DC-3 made with a left-hand trim tab," he admits. More common modifications are main landing gear doors and oversize engine cowls and oil coolers, which Ormond stocks, and shortened, squared-off wingtips, which he doesn't.
Although Standard Aircraft Parts, Tradewinds, and other established parts houses have the largest supply of DC-3 parts, for some parts, operators can also find cheaper sources. Basler's Keesler shows me a crate of new landing gear oleos--landing gear legs with shock absorbers. They came from a source who faxed Keesler out of the blue, announced he had oleos, and suggested that Keesler "Make offer." Keesler says he gets lots of faxes offering grosses of DC-3 airframe parts, some with deals so good that he buys the inventories sight unseen. He does business with a half-dozen hoarders regularly, none of whose names he will reveal. "There are a lot of people out there who want to know who these guys are. I ain't about to educate 'em," he says.
James Ray, manager of museum restoration programs at Delta Air Lines, is similarly taciturn when asked about parts suppliers for Delta's newly restored DC-3, number 3278 (see "Delta Queen," next page). Ray built his own database of approximately 50 parts suppliers during the DC-3 restoration and previous Delta projects, including the restoration of one of two remaining Travel Air S-6000-Bs, the airline's first aircraft. It's obvious that there's competition for the smaller parts suppliers, and finding them can involve time-consuming detective work. "A lot of the principals who have parts rat-holed aren't on the Internet," says Ray, though the Internet can be a useful source, he says. He found 20 percent of the parts he used in the DC-3 restoration there, including an authentic, fabric-covered cord for the galley telephone. "The Internet is also a great place to find aging aircraft Airworthiness Directives and virtually everything we need to know about the airplane," says Ray. For everything operators need to know about the airplane's engines, there's another resource.
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Comments (1)
My dad, G.V. Hill, learned how to fly when he was about 13 from his Uncle "Buck," a barnstormer and mail carrier. Dad's feet were seldom on the ground thereafter.
Starting out as a mechanic for Eastern, then becoming a F/E, He was with them in the 40's to early 60's and -- as legend has it -- once flew in the EAL DC-3 in the Smithsonian. (I have to check the tail number) I have his log books that go way back to the 50's. That EAL plane could have been the one that was used in his initial check ride w/Eastern.
In his later years Dad flew all around the world acting as crew chief for getting the DC-3s and Connies flight-worthy. I even have a newspaper clipping of a landing of an old Connie that he helped get into the air which flew into Bangor Maine in 1986.
Ded loved the old DC-3s I guess because he, too, knew they were fantastic aircraft. After all, as a mechanic and F/E, who else would know a plane from nose to tail better than Dad?
Posted by Bev Hill on June 20,2011 | 06:23 PM