Douglas R5D-4 Skymaster (USA)
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Museum Hours:


April 1- September 30

9:00am - 5:00pm

October 1 - March 31

10:00am - 4:00pm


The museum is open
daily year round (weather permitting),
except for the following days:

New Year's Day,
Easter,
Thanksgiving and
Christmas Day.
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The Castle Air Museum is chartered by the Department of Education and operated by the Castle Air Museum Foundation, Inc., a private not-for-profit corporation,
tax-exempt under IRS Code 501 (c)(3). The mission of the Museum is to preserve military aviation history for future generations.



© Castle Air Museum Foundation, Inc.  Optimized for a screen resolution of 1024x768, using IE6+
The original design was started in 1939 as the DC-4 for the commercial airlines. The first batch was commandeered off the assembly line in 1942 and redesignated the C-54. C-54's were first delivered to the Army Air Forces in March, 1942. They saw service in every theater in World War II and were the primary airlifter across the Atlantic and Pacific, making nearly 80,000 crossings with the loss of only 3 aircraft.

There were 955 C-54Es built at Santa Monica, CA and Chicago, IL; 201 of them were delivered to the Navy as R5D's. The aircraft on display at the Castle Air Museum is one of those Navy transports. It displays the markings it carried when its squadron, VR-8, was assigned to the Military Air Transport Service in 1949, based at Hickam AFB, Hawaii. In 1956, it was assigned to NAS Pensacola and used as the Blue Angels staff transport, carrying the maintenance officer and maintenance team. It was replaced in 1957 by another R-5D. That replacement was the first staff transport to have a Blue Angels paint scheme.

The first Presidential aircraft was a C-54 outfitted with a hydraulic elevator for President Franklin Roosevelt and nicknamed the "Sacred Cow". President Roosevelt used it only once, for his trip to Yalta in February, 1945. It was used by President Truman until 1947. That aircraft is now at the Air Force Museum, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio.

The Berlin Airlift of 1948-49 used 319 of the approximately 400 C-54's then in service to haul supplies to the city when the Russians closed all road and rail access to the city. The Museum aircraft, then assigned to Navy Transport Squadron 8 (VR-8), was one of those used. Over 189,000 flights were made in the 15 months of the Berlin Air Lift, delivering 2.3 million tons of food, fuel, and supplies. C-54's served until 1972.


On the web at: http://www.blueangels.org/Aircraft/Stick/Transports/C54/Tran.htm



Below: 90407 (ex: USAAF 44-9137) was used as the very first Blue Angel's Support Craft in 1956 and  Bottom: re-registered as N-51848 with Pacific Star Sea Food Co. in Anchorage, AK.in the early 80's.
Specifications

Country of Origin:


United States
Manufacturer:
Douglas Aircraft Corporation
Role/Function:
Transport
Serial Number:
BuNo 90407 (ex: 44-9137)
Model Number/Mk #:
C-54E-DC (c/n 27363)
Crew:
4 + 30-50 Passengers
Power Plant:
4 - 1,450 hp Pratt & Whitney R-2000-9A radial engines
Maximum Speed:
265 mph.
Cruising Speed:
207 mph.
Service Ceiling:
23,200 ft.
Range:
4,200 mi. (maximum range according to Boeing)
Weights:
Empty: 73,000 lbs.                  Maximum: 82,500 lbs.
Wing Span:
117 ft.  6 in.
Length:
93 ft.  11 in.
Height:
27 ft.  7 in.
Wing Area:
1,460 ft²
Armament:
None
Cost:
n/a
Number Built:
1,170 (all variants)
# in Current Service:
Retired from military service but still in active civilian service worldwide