

Shared a hanger with one for a few weeks, never got to go up in it though.
Really nice plane.
queenidog wrote:This is a pretty old thread. I'm not a pilot so did not belong (and still don't) to a forum like this, but I wanted to put in my two cents.
Sherman and Bud Found were my two uncles who started Found Bros. Aviation. My father and other uncle, Grey, were not part of the plane manufacturing. Bud was the designer of the plane.
When my uncle visited me before his death a year or so later, he filled in some of the gaps. Yes, the FBA-2C was a great plane. The Centennial was not and backers like T. Eaton (or his heirs) pulled out the financing and the company collapsed. It was many years later that a group of aviation enthusiasts (like you guys) got together and asked my uncle for permission to use the name Found for the Bush Hawk. He really had little to do with the plane other than okaying the design before sticking his name on it. Not sure if he got some kind of payback for this.
Sherman was a pilot in the Berlin Airlift, flying either for the Brits or Americans as Canada had no planes to supply. He went on to fly for TCA and quit after his plane ran off the runway in London, England, ending up in a cabbage patch. No one hurt, plane heavily damaged.
Bud and Sherman bought up all the Lancasters in Canada, for some reason most of them were in Alberta, scrapped them and sold the parts back to the Air Force for full value, not scrap value. Uncle Bud told me that they made a fortune (the one to fund the FBA-2c) just selling the spark plugs for the Merlin engine. They had thousands of the plugs which my uncle said they were selling back to the government for $30 each. They were platinum plugs.
There's an FBA-2C in the Aviation Museum in Ottawa. My daughter had the pleasure to sit in it after explaining her connection to the Found name and plane (she showed her driver's license), to the curator of the museum. I myself have never seen one.
Bob Found
wannabe wrote:I got to ride right seat in one from McCall to the Flying B and back with a load of groceries. My biggest concern was the proximity of that damned carry-through spar so close to my head. The owner could not stop extolling the qualities of the plane.
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