English: Douglas DC-3 in The Henry Ford museum. Although it is now painted in the colors that Northwest Airlines used for its own DC-3s, this particular DC-3 never flew for Northwest. It was originally bought by Eastern Air Lines in 1939. After a 13-year career with Eastern, it was sold to North Central Airlines in 1952, who used it first as an airliner and later as an executive transport. It then passed to North Central's successor Republic Airlines, which eventually was merged into Northwest. After the museum acquired the aircraft, Northwest paid for its restoration, so it was repainted in the colors used by Northwest DC-3s. At one time "728" (so dubbed for its U.S. registration NC21728) was the highest-flight-time DC-3 in the world.
til å dele – til å kopiere, distribuere og overføre verket
til å blande – til å endre verket
Under de følgende betingelsene:
navngivelse – Du må kreditere verket på passende vis, lenke til lisensen og indikere hvorvidt det har blitt gjort endringer. Du kan gjøre det på enhver rimelig måte, men ikke på en måte som antyder at lisensgiveren støtter deg eller din bruk av verket.
del på samme vilkår – Dersom du remikser, omarbeider eller på annen måte bygger på dette verket, må du kun distribuere resultatet under den samme eller en samsvarende lisens som denne.
The original description page was here. All following user names refer to en.wikipedia.
2008-04-28 06:45 Dehk 1936×1296× (2409726 bytes) {{Information |Description=Douglas DC-3 once owned by North West Airline, Now on display in The Henry Ford Museum |Source=self-made |Date=2008 |Author=Derek "dehk" KT W |other_versions= }}
Bildetekster
Legg til en kort forklaring på hva filen representerer
{{BotMoveToCommons|en.wikipedia|year={{subst:CURRENTYEAR}}|month={{subst:CURRENTMONTHNAME}}|day={{subst:CURRENTDAY}}}} {{Information |Description={{en|Douglas DC-3 in The Henry Ford Museum. The DC-3 at the museum was never owned by Northwest Airlines. P