Calling All Mustangs
This September a super-size squadron of P-51s will relive the legend.
- By Stephen Joiner
- Air & Space magazine, August 2007
INA the Macon Belle will roar through the skies over Columbus, Ohio, along with dozens of other Mustang beauties.
© Philip Makanna/ghosts
(Page 2 of 8)
Six Shooter Chuck Hall Ramona, California
“Thirty years ago it was just guys like me,” Chuck Hall says of the experience of Mustang ownership. “All you really needed was a love of aviation.”
We’re sitting in his office at bustling Ramona Airport, the facility he developed from an abandoned U.S. Navy strip in the desert mountains of northern San Diego County. Out on the ramp, after a night of frost alarms in the orange and avocado groves, a Russian Yak 52 is having trouble firing up in the cold.
“Now, you need a million bucks,” says Hall.
He bought his first P-51 in 1965 for just $9,000: “Read the manual, jumped into the cockpit, flew it away.” After racing the modified Mustang for years, Hall sold it and bought Six Shooter, a fully restored fighter that had seen service as a counterinsurgency aircraft in Bolivia. It’s now one of the best known Mustangs in the west and a star of the U.S. Air Force Heritage Flight Team.
Hall’s long aviation career, chronicled by the array of mementos in his office, began in his late teens when he ferried Korea-bound troops in a Douglas DC-4 for Alaska Airlines. Years later, he was flying Boeing 747s for Japan Airlines and Six Shooter in airshows. “No, you would never confuse one with the other,” he laughs. “From a handling standpoint, the P-51 is really more demanding. It’s actually possible to relax and fly a 747.”
Hall’s P-51, the representative vintage World War II airplane on the west coast Heritage Flight Team for the past decade, averages 18 airshows per year. The 65-year-old Mustang flies in a dramatic then-and-now formation with operational F-16s and A-10s—a photo-op for thousands of fans. I ask about protocol in such situations. “If I’m in the lead, I’m pulling the maximum continuous power, and the jets adjust to me,” he explains. “If the jets are in the lead, well, we have to educate those guys about just how fast they can fly.” Heritage Flight teams undergo intensive training annually at Arizona’s Davis-Monthan Air Force Base (which often includes taking the jet pilots up in Six Shooter’s second seat).
The Yak finally roars to life, and Hall and I head outside. He slides back the door of the prefab metal hangar where Six Shooter is stabled, and hands me a stepladder. I climb aboard. The height and pitch of Six Shooter’s wings are striking, the depth and confines of the cockpit claustrophobic. Hall points out that Mustang pilots in World War II flew eight-hour missions in the constrictive seat; afterward, ground crews had to lift them out. Even in the quiet and cold of the hangar, with the stilled instrument faces staring back at me, the vibe of dormant power is palpable.
En route to Heritage Flight Team shows, Hall has the clearance to land at military bases; on the trip to Columbus, however, he’ll be putting Six Shooter down at small civilian airports. It probably won’t be necessary to announce his arrival. “The Mustang has a sound all its own,” he says. “We always draw a crowd.”
Petie 2nd
Tony Buechler
Waukesha, Wisconsin
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Comments (7)
This was a hell of a story. I can't believe hurricane Andrew wiped out the entire museum.
Posted by Michelle on June 19,2008 | 03:45 PM
Please help
I work for Cal State University Of Long Beach and we have
A large wind tunnel for testing.
The wind source come from a 100hp Electric motor.
The propeller and pitch gearbox and servo are from a P-51 Mustang Airplane.
The controller is old and does not work and i am trying to have another controller made.
I need to know what the amperage to operate the servo motor requires.
The old controler listed 28 Volt DC ??? no amps listed
Please if possable help or steer me in the right direction.
Thank you Joe
Posted by Joe Wardell on July 2,2008 | 05:59 PM
The above photo/snap shot of INA the Macon Belle,can a 8x10
of the above be purchased? EDITORS' REPLY: Go to www.ghosts.com
Posted by James H. Lewis,Sr. on May 30,2010 | 06:15 PM
Hq 67th tac rcn sq 1945:
Tostevin, Franklin B., Capt, 0 749 118;
To whom it may concern:
Captain Tostevin was the pilot and sole occupant of an F-6 Mustang fighter plane which departed its base in Belgium
on a visual reconnaissance mission over Germany, on 20. March 1945.
Since this date he is MIA near Much Germany.
The address of his father Edwin Q. Tostevin and brother Donald C. Tostevin was 901 Irving Avenue, Westfield, New Jersey.
Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command and Mucher Citizens inaugurated a American Memorial
in Much Germany on August 2008 for the American Aviators and Soldiers killed in action
liberating the community Much from tyranny in World War II on 11 th April 1945.
Captain Franklin B. Tostevin is named in the inscription of the Memorial.
Therefore I am trying to contact family members of Captain Franklin B. Tostevin.
Can you help me in this respect.
Sincerely
Thomas Anschütz
Colonel M.D.
German Air Force Reserve
Birkenweg 6
53804 Much
Germany
Posted by Thomas Anschütz on June 29,2010 | 01:37 PM
Franklin was my cousin. His brother, Donald died a couple of years ago. His father died a long time ago. I know of one other cousin. Janet Walsh. I hope this helps. I still think about the fine young man he was.
Posted by Marilyn C. Gorman on August 7,2010 | 09:52 AM
Franklin and I were first cousins. My father, Franklin B. Colby, and Franklin's mother, Martha Colby Tostevin were brother and sister.Franklin was born March 22, 1922. the middle boy of three brothers, Edwin, Franklin and Donald. The family lived at 910 Irving Ave and my family lived at 930 Irving Ave, our families were close. Edwin was killed in a car accident in May of 1940. My Aunt Martha died died in April of 1942 just before Franklin went into the Air Force. After Martha died Uncle Ed signed the papers so that Donald could go in the Navy because he we under age.Franklin had a accident in the west and his commanding officer called my Dad to tell him about it. Franklin was named for my Dad. I remember him coming on leave and the times we all had .. His brother Donald came home around the time Frank was MIA and finished high school and then went to the University of Cincinnati where he met his wife Alberta. They had three children Daniel, Chris and Lee Ann. Donald passed away i think in2005. My husband and I went down to Texas to see him and met his second wife Betty and his daughter Chris and her husband Tom. I have the addresses of Daniel and Cora Tostevin and Chris and Tom Rardin also their E-mail addresses. I have many old clippings that I saved about Franklin and I took many of them down to Donald for his family to have.
Posted by Janet Colby Walsh on August 19,2010 | 03:40 PM
Dear Mrs. Gorman, Dear Mrs. Walsh,
thank you for your letters.
In August 2008 a recovery team from the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC) was in my hometown Much, Germany.
Their mission was to recover the remains of an American F-6 Mustang Pilot from the 67th Tactical Reconnaissance Group,
who was missed in action since 20th March 1945 over Much.
My role was to operate as a liaison between JPAC and the Community of Much.
After the mission was completed the recovery team allowed me to remove all remaining items from the recovery area since these items were deemed to be of no importance.
While cleaning up the items, I found a U.S. Captain Rank Insignia.
After reading Captain Franklin B.Tostevin's Individual Diseased Personnel File from the Department of the Army, I believe that this Captain Rank Insignia belongs to your missing cousin, Franklin.
The USA and Captain Franklin B. Tostevin liberated Much and Germany from tyranny in World War II.
It is now 65 years after Franklin’s sacrifice on 20th March 1945 and I truly believe that Franklin's wish would be
that his Captain Rank Insignia should be returned to his family in the United States of America.
Most cordially,
Thomas Anschütz
Colonel M.D.
German Air Force Reserve
Birkenweg 6
53804 Much
Germany
email: tamuch@t-online.de
Posted by Thomas Anschütz on October 6,2010 | 01:08 PM