Air museum works to restore history
Dakota Territory Air Museum volunteers repaint and reassemble planes for display
January 2, 2015
ELOISE OGDEN - Regional Editor (eogden@minotdailynews.com) , Minot Daily News
Work is under way by volunteers at the Dakota Territory Air Museum in Minot to reassemble an F-106 Delta Dart, a plane like the ones the former 5th Fighter Interceptor Squadron at Minot Air Force Base flew.
This past October two trucks specializing in transporting warbirds brought the plane to Minot from from the "boneyard," the storage site for excess military and government aircraft run by the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group at David-Monthan AFB near Tucson, Ariz.
One truck carried the wings, fuel drop tanks, afterburner and other parts of the F-106. The other truck transported the fuselage.
An F-106 like the planes flown by the former 5th Fighter Interceptor Squadron at Minot Air Force Base is being reassembled at the Dakota Territory Air Museum in Minot, shown Dec. 30.The F-106 will be part of a display of 5th Fighter planes at the air museum.
"We've been working on it fairly consistently," said Darrel Kerzmann, an air museum board member who is retired from the Air Force, and cooordinator of the volunteers reassembling the F-106 for display at the air museum.
This is the second year Kerzmann and other volunteers have worked on a plane for an exhibit of 5th Fighter planes. Last year they repainted and completed other work on an F-15 Eagle. The plane had been at Minot AFB for a time before it was moved to the air museum in fall 2013.
Fifth Fighter personnel flew the F-106 prior to the F-15.
Although the volunteers have been taking a break from the F-106 work during the Christmas and New Year's holidays, Kerzmann said they normally work on it a couple nights a week.
He said they've run into different restoration challenges with the F-106. "More on the 106 needs to be assembled," he said.
He said it is very helpful to their work that one of the volunteers, Arv Pomeroy of Minot, used to work on 5th Fighters' T-33s and 106s. Pomeroy heard about the work the volunteers were going to do on the plane for the air museum and offered to help, Kerzmann said.
Other volunteers for the F-106 work besides Kerzmann and Pomeroy include Dave Smith, Mike Hill, Terry Todd and Steve Brown. Smith was a weapons technician with 5th Fighter.
"The main pieces are on," Kerzmann said. "One night we had like 15 people there. We had a 'maintenance blitzkrieg' and we got a lot of pieces put back on." He said Minot Aero Center personnel helped with a lot of the heavy external tanks that needed to go on the plane and other work.
Kerzmann said now they have a lot of the "nitty-gritty" work left to do on the F-106 like sanding and painting.
He said the next three or four months will be busy for them but they expect to have the plane ready by spring.
He said they are also recruiting help for the T-33, another 5th Fighter plane. The T-33, an original plane with 5th Fighter, has been displayed on the grounds of the air museum for a number of years and needs repainting.
Three pads have been marked out south of the air museum's main building where the F-106, F-15 and T-33 will be placed.
The three planes are on loan to the Minot air museum from the National Museum of the Air Force near Dayton, Ohio.
The Minot air museum is closed for the season but visits during the off-season can be made by appointment. For more information visit the museum's website at (dakotaterritoryairmuseum.com).