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con-pilot said:I did fly JetStar serial number 1. It started out as a twin engine with Brit engines, then was converted to a -6, then to a -8, then to the 731.
We got the the airplane from the FAA which operated it with the registration of N1. We operated it in the US Marshal Air Operations Division for a few years.
Sadly very poor maintenance caused the airplane to be grounded. It sat in the hangar for nearly a year and then the ownership was transfer to a College in Kansas. A crew came down and ferried the airplane (on three engines from what I heard) to Kansas and we never heard anymore information regarding its status.
Hopefully that this is the JetStar at Boeing Field.
One note on interest, the overhead fuel panel was reverse of the rest of the JetStars, which caused a few problems when attending Flight Safety for initial and recurrency. I also don't think we ever figured out the emergency gear extension procedures to that airplane because of all the changes it had been through.
The airplane was a maintenance nightmare. I ended up with nearly 500 hours on the JetStar and never completed a 3 or 4 day mission without breaking down. I remember once on a 5 day trip we were gone for 8 days because the airplane broke down every time we flew it. It would break, we'd get it fixed after a couple of days, takeoff and it would break, went on like that for 8 days. It wasn't just me, every crew that flew it had the same problem.
I had two rapid decompressions in it in 48 hours. The second one was with the US Attorney General and his staff on board. He was not impressed.
Now with all said, it was one of the nicest flying airplanes I have ever flown. Tons of room in the cockpit. It did have tendency to love runways however.
con-pilot said:We were told that it was serial number 1 buy the FAA when we got the airplane from them, but it was the FAA that told us, so who really knows.![]()
As for the -6 to a -8 to a 731 I'm not really sure, however, it was Lockheed that changed this airplane from the original twin engine version into a -6. The airplane was converted from the -8 to the 731 when the FAA had the airplane.
Now remember one very important fact, back until a few years ago the FAA did not have comply with FARs. So this JetStar may been the only -6 that ever did make to a 731. As I said earlier, the fuel panel was inverted from all other JetStars, this was/can be confirmed by Flight Safety. There were other minor differences on that airplane compared to the rest of the JetStar fleet, but I cannot remember them now, it has been around 10 years since I flew the airplane.
As I said, I did love flying the JetStar, you had to try really hard to look bad in that airplane, especially on landing.
(It would be nice to know the real truth about that airplane, as I stated I was repeating what the FAA told us.)
I just had a thought, could the one in Seattle be the first non-civilan JetStar and the one the FAA and we operated the first civilan JetStar? Just an idea.
Gatorman said:Guys, don't get me wrong, I enjoy the stories. I think it is great to hear them, but......this is not what I am asking about.
I am asking if anyone knows where I can find a picture (on the internet) of the JetStar that was modified to remove the four TFE731 engines and install two General Electric CF34 engines.
Here is the FAA STC on the mod:
http://www.airweb.faa.gov/Regulatory_and_Guidance_Library/rgSC.nsf/9f3a6784c2775ea485256a46004fefbd/e0ff3a50469f0e3186256ee00040e283!OpenDocument
slickmagneto said:Try contacting the maintenance school located in Vancover. If they have the airplane they may have a lot of photos also.
Spooky 2 said:Google has 10+ pages of JetStar stuff so if one wanted they could sift through it and maybe find some info or pictures of the airplane in question.