Ryan PT-22 Antique Aircraft PictureThis the Ryan PT-22 owned by Dan Collier. |
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A Ryan PT-22 from Dan Collier. Great photos and pictures.
At the Yellow Airplane Online Museum |
Photo from Dan Collier
My Ryan PT-22 is presently being stored in California in my hangar and I am presently on Guam, but I have a photo of it stored on my hotmail account. So I will send you the photo shortly. I have tried to get the plane restored to as close to original as I could, and I'm sorry I don't have a photo of the panels right now, but both panels are original configuration, as called for from the parts list and from the photos I've seen in the training manual. One of the hardest things to come up with was the original compass, as they used a bubble-faced 0009098HSPACE=10 VSPACE=10 BORDER=2 height=202 width=347 align=LEFT alt="Model Airplane of the Ryan PT-22 Aircraft. Click Here to Learn More about this Aircraft Model">compass, and not the standard B-16's like you see in most Ryans today. And I had to remake the whole rear instrument panel, as it had extra holes cut in it for more instruments over the years. Working in a professional sheet metal shop made this a fairly easy task. I just found an original seat belt for it. The belt is in very nice shape and has all the military inspection stamps and a date stamped '43. The slack-takeup hardware on the WWII belts was different from the postwar belts, and they were more of an olive-kakhi color. Really looking forward to installing it in the plane when I get back home. I have a second belt at home, so finally I have a matching set. It's little things like that that make a difference in a restoration, I think. A photo of my Ryan will follow, and thank you for your pleasant response. Regards, Dan Collier |
The Ryan PT-22
Recruit is a military trainer aircraft used by the United States Army Air Corps
and it successor, the United States Army Air Forces for primary pilot training.
It was the first monoplane that the Army had used for primary pilot training, as
all previous PT aircraft were biplanes.
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The 34th Fighter Squadron fly's a WW2 P-47 Thunderbolt Click on photo to see exhibit |
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