Douglas C-133 Cargomaster |
(Download a higher resolution picture
by clicking on any picture below.)
Douglas built 50 turboprop powered C-133 Cargomasters from 1956 to 1961. The Cargomaster first flew on April 23, 1956. They were fairly quickly superceded by the faster Lockheed C-141 Starlifter and Lockheed C-5 Galaxy. Fatigue problems resulted in their retirement in 1971.
I never had the good fortune to see an operational C-133, so my pictures illustrate the post Air Force service fate of a few of them.
Douglas JC-133A 54-0136 on display at the
Edwards AFB US Armed Forces Day 1959 Open House. It was the
second Cargomaster built. Douglas Aircraft Company used it for
contractor demonstrations from June 1956 to August 1961. It was
loaned to NASA from April 1966 to May 1969. Its NASA call number
was 928. It was purchased by the Foundation for Airborne Relief
in 1973. Photographer: Richard Lockett.
Douglas C-133B Cargomaster 59-0524 at the Edwards AFB Open House on May 17, 1960. It was retired to MASDC as CU022 on June 16, 1971.
C-133B 59-0527 at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in April 1972. In
preparation for the creation of the Pima County Air Museum in
Tucson, Arizona, a group of aircraft was assembled on the south
side of the base to supplement the original Golf Links Road
collection.
Link to information about the Pima Air Museum.
The Cargomaster fleet had already
been retired to the Military Aircraft Storage and Disposition
Center (MASDC) at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in April 1972. The
foreground aircraft is the third Cargomaster built, C-133A, 54-0137. The aircraft
arrived at MASDC for storage on January 7, 1971. It was
transferred to the Navy and stored until January 12, 1976 when it
was sold as scrap to Kolar, a local scrap dealer at Tucson. It
was registered as N2251X in May 1978. Restored to the register
(with a blank ownership) by Dross Metals (DMI Aviation) in March
1985. The aircraft was moved from MASDC to the Kolar scrapyard
compound and stored there from November 1982 to August 1988. Then
it was moved to the DMI scrapyard compound. Shorn of its wings,
its fuselage survived until at least April 1999. The aircraft may
still be at the DMI scrapyard.
C-133A,
56-2008 at the Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio in August
1972. It arrived at the museum on March 17, 1971. In the sumer of
1986, the aircraft was repainted in the old MATS livery (metal -
white upper surface).
Link to information about the Air Force Museum Cargomaster.
C-133B,
59-0527 at the Pima County Air Museum in March 1974. At that
time the museum was in possession of two Cargomasters. All
identifying marks had been obliterated on the Cargomaster visible
in the background of this picture. It was probably C-133B,
59-0531. The aircraft had been transferred to the Army for use as
a ground instruction airframe on July 26, 1971. It returned to
MASDC in October 1973 and was stored there until March 1974. The
aircraft then was moved to the Pima County Air Museum compound
and stored there until July 1978. Registered to the United States
Civil Aircraft Register as "N2276V" in July 1978, the
aircraft was moved to the old airport compound of Tucson AP. It
was scrapped at Tucson International Airport in January 2001. Its
owner was the Cargomaster Corporation of Anchorage, Alaska.
Link to information about the Pima Air Museum Cargomaster.
C-133A,
N136AB at Mojave in June1975. It was one of four Cargomasters
bought by the Foundation for Airborne Relief (FAR) in early 1973.
The FAR registered it as N136AR. In August 1974, Properties
Investment Enterprises of Santa Barbara, California bought it and
re-registered it as N136AB, but markings were never applied.
C-133A,
N201AR was also on the Mojave ramp in June 1975. Its Air
Force serial number had been 56-2001.
Cargomaster
Corporation of Anchorage, Alaska acquired N201AR and registered
it as N201AB. By April 1979 N201AB and N136AB had suffered
damage from high winds to the outboard propellor blades, landing
gear doors and wheel hubs. Skid marks indicated that they had
been blown several feet sideways, breaking some of the wheel hubs
in half.
C-133A,
N136AB in April 1979 on the ramp at the Mojave Airport. The
Cargomasters have since been moved to the other side of the
runway, among the vast collection of retired airliners.
Douglas C-133A Cargomasters, N136AB
and N201AB on the back side of the Mojave Airport on
September 10, 2001.
C-133A,
N136AB on the back side of the Mojave Airport on September
10, 2001.
C-133A,
N201AB on the back side of the Mojave Airport on September
10, 2001.
C-133B
59-0527 at the Pima Air Museum on November 23, 2001.
There is a large T34 turboprop engine nacelle from a Douglas
C-133 Cargomaster on a test stand at the Weapons Survivability
Laboratory at China Lake NAWS.
C-133, N199AB delivered a fire truck from Anchorage to Barter Island on Saturday, April 15.
Dust clouds the view of the take-off from behind.
Stu Sibitzky shot these pictures of the Cargomaster in Anchorage on June 19. He reports that it went to Fairbanks to pick up a couple of Kenworth dump trucks and then delivered them to Chalkyitsik, a village with a 4,000x90’ gravel runway with NO RAMP SPACE.
A report just forwarded from Anchorage reveals that Cargomaster N199AB was flown again on August 29, 2002:
We noticed some action around the old C133 (I had thought it was a derelict....), and went to investigate. Was told that it was being prepped for takeoff within a few hours. After being allowed to check out the interior and flight deck, I went back to work. Apparently the aircraft is owned by an 82 year old fellow with plenty of money, and though the aircraft can only be used for government work (for reasons I do not understand), they found work for it, hauling up to the North slope. Apparently Hercs are too small for the job... )
At 4:30 on 8/29/02, they spooled up the engines lined up behind a FedEx MD-11, and took off, (with a stiff headwind and being empty), leaving the ground after only using 2000 feet of runway. After half an hour, it landed again on the same runway (backfiring on landing, of course....) and parked again.)
Cal Taylor has a web site devoted to the Douglas C-133 Cargomaster. He has written a comprehensive book about the C-133: Remembering an Unsung Giant: The Douglas C-133 Cargomaster and Its People.
54-0136 (N136AB) - Mojave, California (Properties Investment Enterprises)
54-0137 - Davis-Monthan AFB, Arizona (fuselage only)
56-1999 (N199AB) - Anchorage, Alaska (Cargomaster Corporation). Started flying revenue service again on August 29, 2002.
56-2000 (N200AB) - Scrapped at Long Beach, California
56-2001 (N201AB) - Mojave, California (Properties Investment Enterprises)
56-2008 - United States Air Force Museum, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio
56-2009 - Octave Chanute Aerospace Museum in Rantoul, Illinois
56-2011 or 56-1998 - Ground Instructional Airframe, William J. Hughes Technical Center / FAA, Atlantic City AP/NJ ?
59-0527 - Pima Air Museum near Tucson, Arizona
59-0529 - was displayed at the New England Air Museum at the Bradley International Airport in Connecticut, but it was destroyed by a tornado in 1980.
59-0531 - Scrapped at Tucson International Airport, Arizona in January 2001 (Cargomaster Corporation)
59-0533 (N133B) - Scrapped at Anchorage, Alaska in the summer of 2000 (Cargomaster Corporation)
59-0536 - Air Mobility Command Museum at Dover AFB, Delaware (formerly displayed at the Strategic Air Command Museum, Nebraska)
Some of the information on this page was provided by Joerg Windmueller of the HochschulSportZentrum which is the University Sports Department of the Technical University of Aachen, Germany.
Giant Airplanes of the 1950s and 1960s |
||||||
First Flight | Wing Span | Length | Wing Area | Gross Weight | Engines | |
Lockheed C-5A Galaxy | 1968 |
222ft,08in |
247ft,10in |
6,200 |
769,000 |
4 x 50,000 lb GE TF-39 |
Boeing 747-100 Jumbo Jet | 1968 |
195ft,08in |
231ft,04in |
5,500 |
850,000 |
4 x 50,000 lb P&W JT9D |
Antonov An-22 Antheus | 1965 |
211ft,04in |
189ft,07in |
3,713 |
550,000 |
4 x 15,000 shp Kuznetsov NK-12MV |
North American XB-70A Valkyrie | 1964 |
105ft,00in |
189ft,00in |
6,297 |
530,000 |
6 x 33,000,lb J-93 |
Douglas C-133 Cargomaster | 1956 |
179ft,08in | 157ft,06in | 2,670 | 275,000 | 4x 6,500 shp Pratt & Whitney T34-P-7WA turboprops |
Boeing B-52 Stratofortress | 1952 |
185ft,00in |
157ft,07in |
4,000 |
450,000 |
8 x 8,000 lb J-57 |
Convair YB-60 | 1952 |
206ft,05in |
175ft,02in |
5,239 |
410,000 |
8 x 8,000 lb J-57 |
Send a message to Brian