BUFF
SWCA Member, Absent Comrade
I remember, as a small kid in the 1950's and 1960's, laying on my back on the grass and watching the DC-3's and other prop jobs heading east after leaving the SLC airport. The mountains surrounding the valley are fairly high on the east and west sides and the planes had to gain a few thousand feet to get out of the valley. On hot days in the summer, they seemed to just hang there, the engines wound up, making a unique sound. They flew visibly slower than the 4 engine Douglas jobs.
One of the U.S. airlines (I think United) had a beautifully restored DC-3 they flew around the country a couple of years ago. They did mini ground tours of it at the SLC airport. It was worth the trip to see it. They were so much smaller inside and out than I remember going through one as a kid.
It's still a beauty of a workhouse. You just have to love the look of that fierce nose and cockpit.
One of the U.S. airlines (I think United) had a beautifully restored DC-3 they flew around the country a couple of years ago. They did mini ground tours of it at the SLC airport. It was worth the trip to see it. They were so much smaller inside and out than I remember going through one as a kid.
It's still a beauty of a workhouse. You just have to love the look of that fierce nose and cockpit.