On June 22, 1954, my dad wrote a check for a Taylorcraft airframe, serial number 9239, and engine stored in a building in Paducah, KY.
The local FBO operator at the time was to do whatever was necessary to the engine and airframe, recover and paint it, and make it airworthy. And as part of the deal the FBO operator was to teach me to fly and obtain a private pilot's license after it was certified.
The lessons never materialized, and a couple years later the T-craft went down in a farm field in the Madisonville-Henderson area with no fatalities or serious injuries but the airframe was written off as a total loss.
I've never known what became of the wreckage, and I'm wondering if there might still be a record of the accident in FAA archives, or at least 9239's NC number.
What brings me to this inquiry is a Taylorcraft R/C kit (1/4 scale IKON N'wst, 90" w/s) I currently have under construction, and I'd like to number it with the same NC number as 9239.
And hopefully someone here might know if 9239 was resurrected, or if Dad's cancelled check is all that remains.
jimh
The local FBO operator at the time was to do whatever was necessary to the engine and airframe, recover and paint it, and make it airworthy. And as part of the deal the FBO operator was to teach me to fly and obtain a private pilot's license after it was certified.
The lessons never materialized, and a couple years later the T-craft went down in a farm field in the Madisonville-Henderson area with no fatalities or serious injuries but the airframe was written off as a total loss.
I've never known what became of the wreckage, and I'm wondering if there might still be a record of the accident in FAA archives, or at least 9239's NC number.
What brings me to this inquiry is a Taylorcraft R/C kit (1/4 scale IKON N'wst, 90" w/s) I currently have under construction, and I'd like to number it with the same NC number as 9239.
And hopefully someone here might know if 9239 was resurrected, or if Dad's cancelled check is all that remains.
jimh
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