1943 Howard I purchased this Howard in late 2006 after it had been
involved in a landing accident..
Item specifics Condition: | Used | Model Year: | 1943 |
Make: | Howard |
I purchased this Howard in late 2006 after it had been
involved in a landing accident. The previous owner was landing on a narrow sea
shell based runway with strong prevailing crosswinds. The left main gear wheel caught
the embankment on the side of the runway. The pilot maintained control but
before he was able to get the wheel back on the runway, the dog leg assembly
failed. The failure caused the L main gear to splay outward as it detached from
the tie rod strut. The damage to the Howard was kept to a minimum, as it came
to rest on the embankment with the belly on the soft shell runway surface. The plane sustained damage to the belly skins, gear leg
fairings, nose spinning, belly stringers and wheel pants. The engine did
experience sudden stoppage but while at idle. The crank dials in with in
tolerance and the three belly fuel tanks were unaffected. The prop had a slight
rearward deflection in one blade. The plane then sat in my heated shop for four years before I
decided to sell it due to time restraints. Over the next couple years the plane
progressed. The prop was sent to Maxwell Propeller and overhauled. Although the
blade was repairable the owner opted to replace with consecutive serial number
blades and polish. The dog leg assembly was replaced and the plane put back on
gear. The owner was replacing wood and removing the old casein glue in the original
wings when the owner decided to sell for personal reasons. Knowing the plane well, I purchased it back. In the meantime
I had acquired a set of completely new constructed wings with only 75 flight
hours. The wings had been built by Russell Ladue and Mike Herald who are well known for craftsmanship. They had built a number of DGA-15 wings, as well as a complete
DGA-6 which was on display in a museum in Chino, CA. This Howard is an excellent project due to the fact that it
is complete. It has all logs dating back to the test flight at the Howard
factory, all naval logs (which usually are not transferred to civilian
service), dating to present. The addition of newly constructed wings which are
the most time consuming, and expense in any Howard restoration. New wings at
present from any reputable person cost in the neighborhood of $68,000. The wool
and leather interior is complete and in nice, usable condition. The instrument
panel still shows well with updated wiring. Cleveland brakes and only 228.5
SMOH from Aero-Engines (2003) and 0 SPOH by Maxwell. Included is also new
fiberglass wheel pants. The plane is worth the $55,000 asking price in parts alone.
If properly restored the Howard would be worth $160,000+ particularly if the economy
stays strong. If you find a Howard for less, there is usually a reason why. Some
may claim to have new wings but just have had the wood skins replaced. Quality
of the wings construction can also play a part. Rather than purchasing a “flying
Howard” at a discounted amount that will eventually need to be taken down
consider saving on the purchase and building what you want. I am also able to complete the project for additional costs if
potential buyer needs. Current date: 2018-05-28