November 30, 2013 at 12:53 am
The historic 737 200 Jet on display for the past several years at Alberta Aviation Museum in Edmonton, made her first flight in years as she was ferried to her new home now that her former airport home is slated for closure…
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By: GrahamSimons - 18th December 2013 at 17:47
Nice to see a little pocket rocket back in the air!
By: Tom H - 18th December 2013 at 17:27
It’s nice they took the trouble to make her airworthy for the ferry flight. A lot of other places would have scrapped it and just found another 737…there are plenty around.
There can’t be many 737s on display, I know the Museum of Flight in Seattle has the prototype….
Sorry everyone for not replying sooner but it has been a very hectic time.
J Boyle
The reason it was so important to save this aircraft is the specific historic provenance.
It is an original PWA aircraft having come into service at the Edmonton Downtown airport in 1979, it’s history from there to it’s retirement is really the story of Alberta and the Jet Age.
It was far too valuable, historically, to lose.
As far as 737s on display there are not many…that I know of:
– Seattle Museum of Flights as you mentioned
– The Alaskan Aviation Museum in Anchorage
– Ours
and ours as evidenced is the only one that was maintained and kept operational (more or less) and running.
Ours has been an important part of Education and trades programs as well as toured by tens of thousands.
Thanks for the kind words all.
Tom
By: Warren F - 1st December 2013 at 17:19
Very nice to see Pacific Western in the air again. Always enjoyed flying with them.
By: Peter - 30th November 2013 at 15:56
12 minutes..
RAW cockpit video of the takeoff and landing….
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By: David Burke - 30th November 2013 at 15:53
Must have been an incredibly short flight!
By: J Boyle - 30th November 2013 at 02:23
It’s nice they took the trouble to make her airworthy for the ferry flight. A lot of other places would have scrapped it and just found another 737…there are plenty around.
There can’t be many 737s on display, I know the Museum of Flight in Seattle has the prototype….