OK, here's one I have not seen... I am getting involved with a Taylorcraft project. It's reportedly a 1946 airplane. It has the usual earmarks of post-war Taylorcrafts, such as sliding windows in the metal doors, the trim tab in the elevator, the trim crank in the cabin, metal stamped ribs, and beautiful vertically laminated spars.
The strange part is that this one does NOT have the regular door hinge tabs welded onto the fuselage door frame. This one has separate door hinges that apparently screw or bolt onto the wood former at the front of the door opening.
So the door hinges are not a permanent part of the fuselage. The serial number of the airplane is therefore not on the right upper door hinge like most T-crafts.
So where the !($*%# is the serial number if it is not on the door hinge? Which Taylorcraft models had separate door hinges?
Mr. Redpath? Mr. Barber? Mr. Mays? Mr. Peek? Any of the other grizzled old-timers with 20 T-craft restorations under their belt?
I'm gonna need to find a serial number on this airplane before I can convince the feds it is what I say it is.
The strange part is that this one does NOT have the regular door hinge tabs welded onto the fuselage door frame. This one has separate door hinges that apparently screw or bolt onto the wood former at the front of the door opening.
So the door hinges are not a permanent part of the fuselage. The serial number of the airplane is therefore not on the right upper door hinge like most T-crafts.
So where the !($*%# is the serial number if it is not on the door hinge? Which Taylorcraft models had separate door hinges?
Mr. Redpath? Mr. Barber? Mr. Mays? Mr. Peek? Any of the other grizzled old-timers with 20 T-craft restorations under their belt?
I'm gonna need to find a serial number on this airplane before I can convince the feds it is what I say it is.
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