Seattle's
World Cruiser to fly
again.
Visit
by ERIC WILKINSON /
KING 5 News
Posted on
January
26, 2010 at 6:22 PM |
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RENTON, Wash. -
Retired Boeing R&D man Bob Dempster is setting out on an expedition
to fly
around the world. That's not an especially daunting task these days --
until
you realize that he's doing it in a plane designed more
than 80 years ago, and that he's building the plane himself.
"It's a big model
airplane," said Dempster. "I
guess some of us never grow up."
With the precision
of fine
craftsmen, Dempster's five-man team is building an almost exact
replica of the "Seattle" -- a
Douglas World Cruiser -- the first plane to circumnavigate the globe
back in
1924.
"This was akin to
going to the moon in 1924," said the bright-eyed Dempster
with an infectious, Santa-like laugh.
Many of the plane's
parts held
together with simple glue and nails, just like the original.
The original "Seattle"
took off from Lake Washington 86 years ago --
on a 6-month, 26,000-mile mission to
circle the planet. It only got as far as Alaska,
though, when it hit bad weather and crashed. Three other Douglas
cruisers did complete the journey.
But building the
Seattle II is
an inexact science at best, as there is no single set of complete plans
for how
the original was built.
"The general thought
might be
that everybody knows what they're doing," said project worker
Keith
Murphy. "The reality of it is, we learn as we go."
Like the original
expedition, this
will be a two-person crew. However, this time the person in the
second
seat is someone who has been co-piloting Bob for
more than 20 years.
Diane Dempster,
Bob's wife, will run
logistics and act as backup pilot, but she insists there will be no
"backseat piloting."
"We have an
agreement,"
she said with a smile. "The driver is the driver and the other
person
will assist when asked."
Bob and Diane
plan to take off on their adventure in April 2011. When they
return, the
plane will be donated to the Museum of Flight.
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Signature of volunteer
Hank
Hendrickson, who piloted a Boeing B-17 bomber
during World War II, on the pieces of the World Cruiser's wing
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