Re: Smithsonian's Concorde has a Neighbor

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For 'Flying Cloud,' a Momentous but Quiet Landing
Vintage Airliner Comes Home to Dulles

By Don Phillips
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, August 7, 2003; Page B01


At a sunny 11:09 a.m. yesterday, chief pilot Richard "Buzz" Nelson killed
the engines on Boeing's oldest flyable airliner for the last time,
transforming it from a living, roaring piece of history into a much
anticipated museum piece.

The 63-year-old, four-engine Boeing S-307 Stratoliner touched down
effortlessly at Dulles International Airport, in marked contrast to a
flight last year when the plane crashed into a Seattle bay and had to be
restored again.

Yesterday's landing, which followed a goose bump-raising low flyover of
Runway 19R at Dulles, was witnessed by a small contingent of Boeing
employees, reporters, photographers and officials of the National Air and
Space Museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center. The plane was on the final leg
of its journey from Seattle to the new museum at the airport, which is to
open in December.

There was open sorrow that the big silver Clipper Flying Cloud would never
fly again. The Smithsonian Institution has a policy against operating
artifacts.

"It's a sad moment, really, for me," said Nelson, a longtime Boeing test
pilot who is now chief pilot for the Boeing 767 program. "I believe an
airliner like this should be flown. But I understand the risks, having
been involved in a nasty accident."

It was clear that Nelson did not consider yesterday's flawless flight to
be redemption for last year's "nasty accident" -- in which he ditched the
Stratoliner in Elliott Bay after it ran out of fuel -- even though Boeing
officials made clear they had no qualms about trusting their valuable
piece of history to him.

Wiping his eyes, Nelson said: "I've had a great career. I prided myself on
being a safe pilot. I never had an incident like that before. I take full
responsibility for that. I'm really grateful to Boeing for having enough
confidence in me to let me fly this airplane."

For Nelson, slightly younger than the plane itself, the Stratoliner was a
family affair. His parents met when his father was a young aeronautical
engineer responsible for designing the plane's engine cowlings and his
mother was secretary to Boeing's chief engineer.

The Flying Cloud at Dulles is one of 10 that Boeing built and the only one
remaining, although the fuselage of a Stratoliner originally bought by
Howard Hughes, which he called his Flying Penthouse, is in use in Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., as a houseboat.

As the first pressurized airliner, the piston-powered Stratoliner could
fly as high as 20,000 feet, above a lot of bad weather.

The Clipper Flying Cloud was built in 1940 for Pan American Airways and
went into service on a Brownsville, Tex., to Mexico City to Los Angeles
run. More than 50 years later, a team of Boeing volunteers returned the
plane to its original appearance, inside and out.

Its interior smacks of an aviation era long gone, when passengers were
treated royally and had plenty of legroom. The cabin has nine seats along
its left side and four compartments with six seats each -- or four beds
each -- along the right side. The placement of windows is different on
each side to fit the various configurations. The plane flew with a crew of
six: a pilot, co-pilot, flight engineer, navigator, radio operator and
steward.

"It flies like a 1940s vintage airplane," Nelson said. "It's a thrill.
It's a challenge compared to a modern airplane."

The Stratoliner has no autopilot, not even an altitude-holding function.
"The autopilot is right here," Nelson said, holding out his hands.

The Flying Cloud and other Stratoliners were pressed into military service
in World War II. After the war, Pan Am flew the Flying Cloud until
retiring it in 1948, when it moved on to a succession of owners.

In 1954, it was bought by the Haitian air force and, in 1956, became the
personal plane of Haitian dictator "Papa Doc" Duvalier. Asserting that he
did not trust pilots or planes, Duvalier sold it a year later.

In 1969, the plane was purchased by Aviation Specialties Inc. of Mesa,
Ariz., and was being converted into a water bomber to fight forest fires
when it was spotted by a Smithsonian curator. The museum bought it but had
no place to show it, so the plane was lent in 1972 to an air museum in
Tucson.

By 1994, the Smithsonian was ready to reclaim its property and made
arrangements with Boeing to restore it. A Boeing team made the plane
temporarily airworthy, and a crew led by Nelson flew it to Seattle. The
Flying Cloud was restored in the same building where it was built.

During test flights last year, the crew relied too much on the cockpit
fuel gauge instead of measuring fuel with a dipstick, according to a
National Transportation Safety Board investigation of the plane's March
2002 accident.

Nelson ditched the plane in Elliott Bay just a few feet from a Coast Guard
rescue station and in full view of diners at Salty's Restaurant in West
Seattle. The crew members walked onto the wing and then into a rescue boat
without getting their feet wet.

The plane sank but experienced only minor damage and saltwater
contamination; it was fully restored again in little more than a year.

Its last flight took it from Seattle to Great Falls, Mont., St. Cloud,
Minn., and an air show at Oshkosh, Wis. On Tuesday, the crew headed for
Dulles, pausing overnight in Pittsburgh to wait out bad weather.

As the Flying Cloud taxied yesterday to its temporary storage position
behind the Air France Concorde, a Boeing employee pulled a reporter aside
and said, "The museum may have the plane, but the heart and soul is ours."



 2003 The Washington Post Company


On Thu, 7 Aug 2003, Nick Laflamme wrote:

> The "penalty box" at the south end of Dulle's 1L/19R runway now has two
> planes waiting for the Smithsonian's new annex at Dulles: the Corcorde has
> been joined by the Boeing Stratoliner, just arrived from Seattle by way of
> Oshkosh.
>
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A25672-2003Aug6?language=printer
>
> Nick
>

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