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Texan TomcatOur second job here at Beech Restorations is the restoration to flight of our AT-6 Texan, G-TOMC, otherwise known as Texan Tomcat. |
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The AT-6 Texan was a response to a US requirement for an advanced trainer (BC1) published in the mid 1930s. The Texan was designed by 'Dutch' Kindelberger, one of the men behind the legendary DC-3 Dakota. Like his Douglas design, the AT-6 was rugged, reliable, easy to maintain and mass-produce. The T-6 with its Pratt & Whitney R1340 Wasp 9 cylinder 550hp radial engine (the larger version of the R985 Wasp Junior as used on the Beech) is without doubt the greatest training aircraft ever constructed.
Our Texan was constructed in mid 1942 as an AT-6D model (Bu No 42-4415) by North American Aviation Inc (NAA), Dallas, Texas (many were built at their plant in Inglewood, CA but are not 'true' Texans). At that time she would have cost the US taxpayer the sum of $18,275.00. In August 1943 she flew to the USAAF Advanced Pilot School at Napier Field, Alabama and her career as a pilot maker began. Many hundreds of American, British and Commonwealth pilots would have flown her before getting their wings and flying off to war across the globe. After periods at Craig Field, Alabama and Independence Field, Kansas, Texan Tomcat was placed into storage in June 1947.
In March 1952 our aircraft was returned to NAA at Columbus Ohio for
remanufacture as T-6G model Texan (Bu No 51-14700). This included overhauling
the airframe, strengthening the wings and updating various systems. After her
refit, our T-6 served with the 3301st Pilot Training Squadron at Columbus AFB.
After three years moving around she was surplus to requirements again as the
jet age loomed. Briefly at the 'desert boneyard' - Davis Monthan, AZ, she was
transferred to the Mutual Defence Aid Programme in January 1957. MDAP was a US
backed scheme to bolster friendly countries against the Communist threat and
later that month our aircraft was purchased by France for $2000 and shipped to
Europe. Now known as '114700' she was modifed as a Counter Insurgency (COIN)
ground attack aircraft with the installation of SNEB rockets, 7.5mm machine gun
packs and MATRA rocket pods.
Then with the 4/72 Squadron, Ground Support Light Aviation Command she was sent to
Tiaret, Algeria to serve in the conflict there (1954-1962).
It was at this stage that the COIN T-6s were nicknamed 'Tomcats'
by the French - because of their 'growl'. After over 6000hrs of training and
combat sorties she was dropped from the French Air Force inventory in 1965.
Little is known of her after this period, but by 1979 she lay derelict with other T-6s at La Ferte Alais, Paris. Shipped to the UK in 1984, she became a film star when mocked up as a zero for a ground sequence in Steven Spielberg's epic 'Empire of the Sun'. She then passed through several owners until being obtained by Tomcat T-6 Restorations in October 2001.
We intend to restore her to airworthy status over the next few years and in
addition to the Beech will help to form a collection of significant US training
aircraft from WW2. Our T-6 is particularly rare as she has documented combat
history! She will once again wear wartime US markings when rolled out at the
end of the restoration. Yellow wings, silver fuselage and black and white
chequerboard cowling, with 'buzz' number E471 (E= Napier Field) circa 1943. Some
artistic licence is used here, however no comprehensive policy (save for stars'
n'bars and 'buzz' numbers) was ever decreed by the USAAF - it's what she could
have worn. However, she would have had a checked cowl at Moore AFB in the 1950s.
We have managed to build up a considerable T-6 spares holding for her
and look forward to the fresh challenge that Texan Tomcat provides. At present
her fuselage frame has been fitted out with controls and ancilliaries and mated
to her centre section, she was lowered on to her undercarriage early in 2005
and the canopies have now been fitted. Texan Tomcat has nose art already - Tom Cat
(from Tom & Jerry) in the pose of the mascot adopted by the Grumman F-14 Tomcat
jet fighter - complete with six-shooter.