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C-47 civil conversion

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Old 6th Nov 2010, 19:52
  #21 (permalink)  
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The civil DC3 was also available with large double cargo doors. For some unknown reason the KNILM DC3s and DC5s had the cargo doors on the right (starboard) side, rather than the usual left (port) side.

Many of the civil DC3s in Papua New Guinea in the 1960s and early 1970s still had the original side saddle folding passenger seats, with netted cargo down the center of the cabin.

Right side door. (Link courtesy of Queensland Air Museum and PPRuNer Fris B Fairing).
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Old 6th Nov 2010, 20:14
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There are so many variants on the DC-3 theme that entire books have been written.

The initial order -- AA in 1935 -- had the passenger door on the RIGHT side, and used WRIGHT engines. When United ordered it, they called for a LEFT pax door and Pratt & Whitney engines. The aircraft was really successful prewar, orders totalled about 800 at the time of Pearl Harbor. This number of civil orders was not reached until the Boeing 727 in the 70s - maybe 35 years later.

Although the C-47 had the cargo door with a paratroop door-within-a-door, the C-53 had only the paratroop door - no cargo door. Both used the P&W engine, although in civil use some operators converted them to Wright engine to standardize their fleet. Purdue Aeronautics was one such example.

Generally, passenger conversions of the C-47 had the cargo door riveted shut, and only the smaller pax door was used.

There were several mandatory mods as the result of service experience, the wing attachment flanges being one example.
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Old 6th Nov 2010, 21:17
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barit1, help me out here if you can.

My DC-3 was converted by company that is not in business any longer, at least not that I am aware of. It was converted in 1946 and in the paperwork that came with aircraft it was released from the USAAF because it was 'war weary', with less than 500 TT. Which I found amusing.

Anyway, I cannot for the life of me remember the name of the company, except I want to say that one of the names of the company was something like Warner.

The first civilian owner was the Wriggly Company, of the chewing gum fame.

Does that ring any bells?

Thanks.

C-P
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Old 7th Nov 2010, 00:44
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Wriggly is great, I love it, but the people who make chewing gum are Wrigley.
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Old 7th Nov 2010, 00:58
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con-pilot:
Anyway, I cannot for the life of me remember the name of the company, except I want to say that one of the names of the company was something like Warner.
The name that comes to mind is Remmert-Warner, in St. Louis maybe.

But don't hold me to any of that.
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Old 7th Nov 2010, 01:43
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This aircraft sounds similar:
DC3/C47A Serial No 43-48225. Accumulated 772 hours with the Army Air Corps Transport Command up until January 1946.
Subsequently:

Jan 46 to Apr 46,
Billy D. Parker of Phillips Petroleum.
Bartlesville, Oklahoma.
8.00 hours.

Apr 46 to Jun 78
P.K. Wrigley of Chicago, Illinois.
Based on Catalina Island,
Avalon Airport, Catalina.
2707 hours.

Jun 78 to Apr 80
Naval Museum,
Pensacola, Florida.
1.00 hour.

April 80 to Jul 86
Robert A. Haefner III, President
GHK Oil Company.
Olahoma City,
247 hours.

July 86
Beat A. Wertli, President
Dream-Aire, Inc.
Wilmington.DE
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Old 7th Nov 2010, 01:21
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Remmert-Werner were based at Lambert Field and I believe they did mostly conversions to corporate machines. Basically they took an ex-military C-47 or C-53, stripped it and added state of the art radios, w/x radar and a radar nose, single-pane heated windshield, etc. They replaced the Pratt R1830-92 engines with either the -94's or the Pratt R2000's used on the DC-4, or the Wright R1820-56's. The interiors were pretty luxurious, with a center credenza, a couple of single and double club arrangements and a three piece divan or two. Most had two panorama windows a side. We bought CF-ORD from Ford of Canada. It had 18 seats in the above configuration, with the 1350 HP -94 engines and the increased gross weight to 26,900 lbs for passengers. I don't have a pic of it, and I won't bore you with a pic of the model I built of it.

Here's another example of R-W's conversions, this time an ex-C-53 with the R2000 engines.



This airplane was owned by the Quebec Cartier Mining Company, hence the registration, CF-QCM. QCM used to be the Canadian mining arm of US Steel.

Last edited by pigboat; 7th Nov 2010 at 01:55.
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Old 7th Nov 2010, 19:07
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I thought almost all DC3s used post war were actually converted Dakotas / C47s? Many had minimal conversion to retain flexibility.
Until the demise of Aden Airways (1967) they operated 7 such. One lost to 'terrorist' bomb in Nov '66 Maifah-Aden. They all had original cargo doors and used in mixed configuration..i.e. seat tracks, easily removable seats. So you might find yourself (I've always been SLF) sitting next to a bulldozer gearbox or large tin box of .303 ammo.
On one occasion my girlfriend turned up at El Ataq (edge of Empty Quarter) with a fine Arab wooden chest. As the ground agent had a second job as local Shell petrol station dealer - I was local Shell District Manager, no problem off loading two pax (British political officer and visitor - yuk!), removing two seats, and loading said chest.
Last DC3 fight I made was with Air Kenya in 1991 - two a/c, RAF Dakotas vintage 1946, ex EAAC which I think still had cargo doors? But I am open to correction - as always.
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Old 7th Nov 2010, 19:23
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Okay, let's see here.

First;

April 80 to Jul 86
Robert A. Haefner III, President
GHK Oil Company.
Olahoma City,
247 hours.
Yup, that was us, the boss's name is spelled Hefner, but other than that 100% correct. I guess I forgot about Billy Parker, of Phillips 66 Oil, in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. When we bought the aircraft is had less than 3,000 hours total time. It had the lowest total time of any DC-3 still flying in the world. At least I never heard of one with less time still flying.


Piggy and bairt;

The name that comes to mind is Remmert-Warner, in St. Louis maybe.
Yes, that's it, thanks.

And finally;

Wriggly is great, I love it, but the people who make chewing gum are Wrigley.
Oops, quite right you are.


And just for the hell of it, here is the picture of it again.



And the cabin.

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Old 7th Nov 2010, 22:52
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Details of the Aden Airways DC3 / C47 fleet here, with photos showing cargo doors adenairways.com/Aden%20Airways/fleet_dc3
Note they are all listed as DC3 C47 (various marks) except one R4D
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Old 8th Nov 2010, 00:13
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I remember that Pan American or its affliates in South America used "Hi-Per DC3 and were fitted with the R2000 engines and more notably main landing gear doors. Believe the use of increased power engines mandated installation of a geared rudder tab ti ease the rudder pedal load in a single engine go-around.
Pan Am did a lot of DC-3 work at LaGuardia in New York and also service civil B-18 and B-23 which had many common design features with the DC3.
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Old 8th Nov 2010, 15:54
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... Believe the use of increased power engines mandated installation of a geared rudder tab ti ease the rudder pedal load in a single engine go-around.
That's correct tt, or at least the one that I flew did. A rum thing though, both aircraft had a cockpit placard that warned "Avoid yawed flight". I think I know why. I was co-pilot one morning when we were doing our sched with CF-ORD, chugging along VFR under broken cloud. A cold front had gone through some time earlier and it was a bit turbulent, nothing to worry about but an occasional hefty jolt. All of a sudden the airplane yawed abdruptly to the left, enough that I thought we'd lost the left engine. I was flying, with one foot on the floor and the other on the tank selector, so by the time I got both feet back on the rudder pedals, all had returned to normal. The Captain and I looked at each other and asked what the hell had happened. We figured it must have been that the airplane yawed in a gust and the rudder tab simply exaggerated the action.

By the way, are you the Tony who used to write the superb articles for Airliners magazine?
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Old 8th Nov 2010, 21:01
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wow! Thanks very much, very useful info & links!
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Old 9th Nov 2010, 06:26
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As so many DC-3s were war weary/ surplus and converted to civilian roles, was the accident rate higher than expected? Did engines fail more frequently?

I ask because as a small lad and keen on aeroplanes I have a vague remembrance of some late 40's family table talk being about ex wartime now civil machines proving somewhat "dicey".

Probably part of the post war apathy - I remember my mother, bless her, attributing every abnormal weather event to "The Atom!"
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Old 9th Nov 2010, 13:40
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Canadair, in Montreal, did conversions after WW 2, Trans Canada Airlines fleet of DC-3's was done by them around 1946.



Douglas DC-3 Dakota
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Old 9th Nov 2010, 22:26
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The one and same Tony. Thanks much for the nice words.
Last DC-3 I was on was at Smith Reynolds Airport in Winston Salem North Carolina. The props were being serviced by Piedmont Aviation Services in mid-90s. It was a stretch version converted to PT-6 and updated instrumentation. Quite a nice job a credit to the Old Lady able to assimilate those changes quite gracefully.
Does anyone remember the story of a BEA Dakota calling in at 25,000 feet. It was intercepted by hastily scrambled jets as they couldn't believe a Dakota up there. It had been fitted with RR Darts to prove them for the oncoming Viscount service. Carried only certain cargo and the pilots naturally were on O2. Must have given them a laugh or maybe a scare?

Last edited by tonytech2; 10th Nov 2010 at 04:36.
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Old 9th Nov 2010, 22:56
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Originally Posted by aviate1138
As so many DC-3s were war weary/ surplus and converted to civilian roles, was the accident rate higher than expected? Did engines fail more frequently?

I ask because as a small lad and keen on aeroplanes I have a vague remembrance of some late 40's family table talk being about ex wartime now civil machines proving somewhat "dicey".
By no means all the wartime DC3s were converted to civilian use, there were plenty to go round the postwar demand and a significant number had actually seen very little use. Those which were notably tired were not wanted, and scrapped. Engines of the time were subject to periodic substantial major overhauls which (in theory) brought them back to manufacturers original tolerances etc.

There were a wide range of civilian conversions, and you actually wonder if any two in service were the same. The BEA ones, done by Scottish Aviation at Prestwick, and renamed Pionairs, were especially thorough.

There were other surplus WW2 types, such as the 4-engined bombers, which did not make anything like such a popular conversion to civilian use; possibly it was these being discussed at the time.
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Old 10th Nov 2010, 02:55
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We figured it must have been that the airplane yawed in a gust and the rudder tab simply exaggerated the action.
Oh, yes, rudder reversal and rudder lock was a real issue on the DC-3, particularly on single engine. Use the rudder very gently, or you'd get a nasty surprise. And, we won't talk about the aft CG stall - very easy to find yourself looking up at the world! But...airplanes did those sort of things fifty years ago.

The DC-3 I flew had been converted originally in 1947 by Canadair, with R-1830-94's with the two stage supercharger. Great for medium altitude photo and relatively fast, too.
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Old 10th Nov 2010, 03:28
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..relatively fast, too.
They used to file 160 kt TAS with that one in my pic. We filed 150 kt with ORD, the ex-Ford machine.

I discussed that rudder action with Don McVicar once during an elbow-bending at the Green Hornet in Montreal. He'd never heard of it on the DC-3, but the Bristol Blenhiem that he flew across the north when he did the ferrys from England to Vancouver had a similar trait. He said if it happened the airplane went into a flat spin and the only option was to bail out.

It's great to make your virtual aquaintance Tony. Your account of the Eastern 727 accident at JFK is one of the most poignant pieces I have ever read.

We used Piedmont for our landing gear and propeller overhauls, and also for that one-of wing pull on our corporate F-27. It was strange taxiing across Liberty Avenue, waiting for the light. Remember John Conroy's Tri-Turbo 3, where he stuck a 3rd PT-6 in the nose? It was a real performer on skis. I seem to recall British European had 3 of the Dart conversions, used them as freighters.
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Old 14th Jan 2013, 03:30
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Question DC-3

My husband was a small plane pilot, his friend flew 747s. His friend Larry flew for United. Larry had a friend in Switzerland who rebuilt or helped rebuild DC-3s.

This is going back quite a few years, my husband and Larry both have passed away and I stumbled on your question by accident and thought I would offer my two cents. And I could be all wrong.

The man in Switzerland was named Beat Wertli and he had a company that flew only DC-3s. called Dream-Aire Inc. I think there was a crash and the company went out of business.

I remember something about a plane that was from Wriggly's .. but it might have been a Piper Tri-Pacer that Bob Nass bought...

Anyway.. didn't mean to crash your party.. but there was something about Wriggly's and a plane my husband talked about..
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