The house I grew up in was right under the glide path for runway 24 into Lambert Field, and about a mile or so from the threshhold of the run way. Airplanes were pretty low when they went over my house! At that point in time, that runway was the only instrument runway they had at Lambert, and in bad weather, all inbound or outbound airplanes went over in bad weather, or at night. If they were landing, the landing lights would shine in the big picture window of our living room, and light up the whole room. When we were kids we thought that was SO cool we would open the curtains wide and turn out all the other lights, but only if Mom wasn't home! There is nothing like the sound of a Connie or DC-7 taking off or landing when everything was at full rich and pitch! It made the windows rattle, and the radiation comming off the ignitions would mess up TV reception while they were right over the house.
Many years later, October of 1993 I think it was, there was an Unlimited Air Race at the old Olathe, Kansas Naval Air Station. Chris McMillin and I went up there for that, and that trip alone has a lot of stories to go with it, but relating to the subject, The Save-A-Connie Super Constellation flew over from Kansas City and really beat up the filed before he landed. Each pass was lower and faster ! After aboput 6 or 8 passes, it landed and was on display for the day. That was early on in it's restoration history, but was still pretty cool to go through, and I have toured the airplane many times since then. Would sure like to see it fly one more time, and I would probably buy a ride in it if possible.
Type at you later,
Dan McEntee