Douglas C-47B "Skytrain"
Few aircraft are as well known or were so widely used for so long as the C-47 or "Gooney Bird," as it was affectionately nicknamed. The aircraft was adapted from the DC-3 commercial airliner which appeared in 1936. The first C-47s were ordered in 1940, and by the end of WWII 9,348 had been procured for AAF use. They carried personnel and cargo, and in a combat role, towed troop-carrying gliders and dropped paratroops into enemy territory.
After WWII, many C-47s remained in the USAF service, participating in the Berlin Airlift and other peacetime activities. During the Korean Conflict, C-47s hauled supplies, dropped paratroopers, evacuated wounded, and dropped flares for night bombing attacks. In Southeast Asia, the C-47 served again as a transport, but it was also used in a variety of other ways, which included flying ground attack (gunship), reconnaissance, and psychological warfare missions.
Warner Robins Air Logistics Center assumed worldwide logistics management responsibility for the C-47 in 1959. The Museum's C-47 was actually purchased for the U.S. Navy and delivered in November 1944 as an R4D-6 and was retired by the Navy in 1973. It was acquired from the Navy and moved to the Museum in 1984.
SPECIFICATIONS |
Serial # : |
43-49442 |
Wingspan: |
95 feet |
Cost: |
$138,000 |
Length: |
64 feet, 5 inches |
Max. Speed: |
232 mph |
Height: |
16 feet, 11 inches |
Cruising Speed: |
175 mph |
Weight: |
33,000 lbs. loaded |
Range: |
1,513 miles |
Engines: |
Two Pratt & Whitney R-1830 engines, with 1,200 hp each |
Service Ceiling: |
24,450 feet |