Project Links Connecticut History With Corsair
After spending 20 years assembling the parts and expertise
needed to re-build a Corsair, Craig McBurney is closing in on his
goal of flying Connecticut's Official State Aircraft. The
planes were the only warbird to be completely built in a single
state.
Over 12,000 Corsairs were built for the between 1940 and 1952.
The distinctive aircraft were were made famous by Navy and Marine
Corps fliers in the Pacific during World War II.
After serving as a gunner in the USAF, McBurney turned to
museums and airshows to satiate his passion for aviation.
Soon, he took a more active role in preserving his favorite
aircraft, the F4U-4 Corsair.
McBurney eventually moved back to CT from FL, "to try and tie in
the history of the state of Connecticut, how much Connecticut has
contributed to the history in the country and the world, for that
matter." In 2005 McBurney helped get legislation passed
deeming the Corsair the state aircraft.
McBurney is focused on restoring to flight a single "V-166B"
Corsair produced in 1945 by United Aircraft Corporation at its
factory in Stratford , CT. He has photos and some of the original
parts from the aircraft with serial number 9484, US Navy Bureau
Number (BuNo) 97330. It is a late version of the F4U-4,
distinguished by its metal wingtips, flat windscreen and style of
canopy.
Spending upwards of $500,000 of his own money, McBurney has
collected 10 F4U-4s along with enough parts to fill several
warehouses in CT and AZ. His hangar at Chester Airport (SNC)
houses an assortment of pieces, including a 3,000 lb Pratt &
Whitney engine painstakingly reassembled from 14,000 individual
parts.
"We've got the expertise. Now we just need an infusion of
capital," McBurney told The Hartford Courant. "We're trying to find
a sponsor here in the state of Connecticut that will help us
finance this over the next couple of years to allow us to stay in
the state."
His goal of raising $1 million to complete the aircraft over the
next three years seem steep, but McBurney says it will come back to
benefit the local community. He claims the specialized
manufacturing, aircraft restoration skills, and general interest in
state history generated by the project will have long-term benefits
for the area.
The real benefit may be the students that have worked on the
"Connecticut Corsair." The project allows them to get hand-on
experience with manufacturing and design while meeting potential
future employers.
In addition to students and volunteers working on the project,
local businesses have also donated services and time. Mark
Bliek, owner of Bolton Works, is helping create three-dimensional
images of the plane's parts that will be used to create virtual
models and then to manufacture new parts. He sees the Corsair
restoration as a great business networking opportunity.
"What I learned from this is meeting up with the right companies
will allow you to do things which you really thought were not
possible before," Bliek told the paper. "I think what Craig
does is just bring those companies together."
The group recently built a 7-foot scale model of a Corsair that
traveled to the Paris Air Show to grace a CT economic development
booth. In time, McBurney hopes to have a full-scale aircraft
that can make the trip too.