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Dietmar Schreiber
Приєднався 7 лип 2007
C119 Flying Boxcar Engine Run Up
Engine Runup of the Fairchild C119 Flying Boxcar N8501W at Palmer, Alaska on June 12th 2023.
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Відео
Intersky ATR 72 air to air
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Intersky OE-LID ATR 72 air to air over "Bodensee"
DHL Air Austria Boeing 757-200F OE-LNZ air to air shooting
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A short Video of my air to air shooting with a DHL Air Austria Boeing 757-200. More pictures on my website www.airtoair.at.
Are they going to restore that
I wonder how would this plane would fly with those new 6 or 8 blade propellers and new more powerful engines installed in it???
MY LADS I AM STRATOSPHERE, LORD OF THE SKIES! ⛅️
This is one cool airplane.
Just imagine Boxcars with T56's.
I remember these and many other types at Andrews AFB, in the late 50s-early 60s. Before the Air Force went all jet. Really enjoyed those days as a kid. Thanks for posting
The plane is still flyable, and they don't even use it.
5 grand per flight hour, just for fuel and oil. You have to have a good reason to fly these unless your some gazillionaire...Regards from Alaska!
Went to LRAFB yesterday and saw one of these on static display. Was just wondering about it. Ex awacs.
Wiki says the Boxcar used R-4360s but the engines on this airplane look like Wright R-3350s
Those definitely aren't 4360's, probably are 3350's
They switched to the R-3350 in the C-119F because the USAF needed so many R-4360s for the B-36s. I personally haven't seen any vids of 4360-engined F-119s still flying today. I suppose the 4360 is just too complex and also needed for the fire-fifgting Martin Mars flying boat
They used both the R-3350 and R-4360 on different versions. I agree this one looks to be R-3350s.
😂😂😂
Wonderful to see these birds being preserved! Hope you folks can be honored for this achievement. Very impressive work.
I can't believe this is airworthy
Can it still fly ? - I'm guessing probably not.
i was told it was gonna be made flying. very coold
Esse é o avião do filme, O VOO DA PHENIX !
That was a c82 packet
The flying Boxcar, there were also stationt here in Koksijde in Belgium many years ago.
Definitely going to be The Flight of The Pheonix!
One of the first planes I learned to identify as a small boy living near Tinker AFB in OKC
Wow that's some massive Main Gear.
i got to do a little work on one that belonged to everts air fuel in fairbanks... ours had a gas turbine engine on top. that was back in the early 90s. we had c-46s, dc-6s, caribou, lance, p-140, and an old Curtis robin(?) on floats. i liked working there but the pay was so low i lived in a canvass wall tent on the tanana river nearer to north pole and was starving to death. my camp was next to the midnight sun remote control flying field. those were hard days.
This is my friends boxcar, ive been lucky enough to start it up, it used to be a workhorse here in alaska but various people worked hard to put a stop to it through an act of congress. If i ever win the lottery im gonna pay johnny to let me get my type rating in it.
Yep, seems the Globe masters were the rage. They could haul more.
Would it have killed you to have a few shots of the inside????
If youre ever in alaska stop by palmer airport if johnny is there he loves giving tours of his plane.
Thar's gold in them thar hills!
You are sure right on that one, big time! - But the dear (?!) Federal Gov'ment is doing everything they can to not let us seek that there Gold in them Hills, Been there, done that, Best Regards from Alaska!
Beautiful bird.. packet aircraft..
I had a ride in one of these when I was in the Air Cadets when I was about 13 years old.
Me too, only it was Boy Scouts.
As a kid I saw these flying operationally out of CFB Trenton ON Canada in the late 50s & very early 60s. I remember the excitement when they were replaced by Hercs.
My late Father-in-Law was a crew chief on the 119 during the Korean War. He had a lot of memories, some good but others not so.
Made my first five jump school jumps from these at Ft. BRAGG in 1961. Ride down to Panama and back in one in 1962. Great airplane!
All five jumps at Ft Benning from them back in '68. Had one blow an engine just as take off roll started.
I use watch these birds fly out PDX when I was a young g lad
engine type?
2 × Pratt & Whitney R-4360-20W 28-cylinder air-cooled radial engines, 3,500 hp (2,600 kW) each
@@gearheaddave9639 I had kinda thought so. The same ones that were on the Stratocruiser and the Martin Mars AFAIK
This one has tge 3350s i help work on this one when i have spare time.
@@bjornmclir5015 the Wright R-3350 Duplex-Cyclone?
I forget the exact model but its 3350s and has the turbo compounders, i know the owner ill check with him next time im out there.
First plane ride I ever had, my dad was in the air force and got us a hop on the plane.
"I flew the best soldiers in the army long before I idolized the sunflower aircraft" - A remark from C119
There used to be a yellow one piloted by Cpt. Baloo from squadron Tailspin. One hell of a pilot, flew it like a fighter jet to deliver his cargo. They sure don't make them like they used to.😋
I'll keep telling my dad's indiscretion of youth story about these planes since he can't. He's 82nd Airborne just before Vietnam was a thing. He and another paratrooper are in the back of one of these having just dropped cargo somewhere, so the back end is off. They decide that sitting on back with legs dangling out of the plane is good fun. Plane banks and they roll to the other side of the plane. He didn't admit to soiling himself but I bet one or both of them did at least a little.
I remember seeing one in NhaTrang belonging to “AirAmerica”. 1971
Had a ride in one from Bethel to Anchorage in Alaska.
Seeing this 119 revived a couple of memories for me. As an "Instrument tech." I only worked one job on the 119 - that was to remove and replace a Torque Oil Pressure transmitter. The sensor was mounted on the nose case of the engine (I think it was a P&W R4360). There were beaucoup Adel clamps from the nose case back to the transmitter mounted on the fire wall. And, I made one free fall parachute jump (a fun jump with about 20 other guys) from a 119, over Hondo, Texas. We took off from Kelly AFB, San Antonio with the "clam shell doors removed. I still have an 8x10 pix of the exit. We got out of the airplane at 8,500 feet. Was a FF of just over 30 seconds. Thanks. MSgt. USAF Ret. PCA/USPA B-6370.
We had a C119 that had been converted into a fire bomber come through the Redding air tanker base one summer when I worked there. It had the dorsal jet engine on top. It was lost later that season when the wings separated from the fuselage, which later led to the USFS airtanker trade-in scandal involving Ronald Reagan's cousin.
I thing the one in the background was abandoned/stranded for years at Port Lions on Kodiak. It had a jet engine on top of the fuselage.
Thats correct, the video is on youtube of it barely making it out of port lions after the engine overhaul.
I was stationed 1954 Ashiya air base Japan troop carrier sq. During Korean War they brought back body to Ashiya,
The reason the prop turns so much before engine start ( count 20 blades ) before ignition on is to insure the engine is not hydro-locked. After flying B47s with SAC on active duty I joined the Calif AirGuard at Hayward. They flew C119C ( R 4360 engine ) in an Air Commando squadron. Good flying aircraft and a great X wind airplane. One flight was to pick up a Curtis Jenney in Iowa and fly it to the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs. After landing we had to wait until it got dark and cooled off enough for the density altitude allowed us to safely take off and fly back to Hayward. The only time I lost an engine was flying out of Hayward with my older brother, active duty 82nd AB paratrooper on board just for a ride. We landed straight ahead into Oakland and my brother got off, called his wife to get a ride home and NEVER rode with me again. Pete
Thats funny! A lot of B-47's lost their wings when they did the pull-up maneuver after launching the "bomb." What else did you fly?
I was at Hayward 69 to 75 as flight line mechanic but on mostly Helo.
Old can.
Flight of the phoenix?
I believe so I was about to say
The producers of flight of the phoenix actualy made him an offer on these boxcars but found some for cheaper elsewhere.
I was stationed at Rosey Rhodes, back in 69, when they called in all the boxcars from the Caribbean area, into retirement. They came for days! Every runway and every taxiway was lined with them and there may have been more I didn't see. It was amazing! I had no idea there were so many of them and in just this one area. I grew up seeing them in news reels and movies and on TV. It was kind of sad, but they were pretty tired by that time. I think a bunch went on to serve in south America but most went to the scrap yard. I was seeing history unfolding.
Looks like a old Air America mule
Sounds like you need a GPU with a little more current capability or at least HP.
I always wanted to fly one. Fantastic airplane. Awesome video.
Has it been sold and preparing to be ferried somewhere?
It lives at palmer airport alaska if you are ever in the area johnny loves giving tours.
Hi, I was flight engineer on the C119 for 4 years back in the 50"s and 60's. I never had a flight problem with this bird. I guess I was very lucky!!!
She was almost new back then.
Cortaste el video, en la mejor parte que es cuando arranca.
I grew up with Boxcars. I've always had a special glow around them. Great aircraft and fun to fly.