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You can own a piece of a B-17

By General Aviation News Staff · June 4, 2024 ·

EAA AVIATION CENTER, OSHKOSH, Wisconsin — Aviation history enthusiasts now have the opportunity to own a piece of one of the Experimental Aircraft Association’s most iconic airplanes, the B-17 Aluminum Overcast.

PlaneTags, made by MotoArt, are limited-edition aviation mementos made from the skin of an aircraft. PlaneTags can be used as an ID tag, keychain, or displayed as a collectible.

Each PlaneTag is hand cut, stamped, and individually etched, making them all one-of-a-kind, according to EAA officials.

The Aluminum Overcast skin used for the PlaneTags comes from the wing when the aircraft was re-skinned in March 2014.

The B-17 Aluminum Overcast collection is limited to 5,000 pieces with prices starting at $110.

A portion of the proceeds from each purchase of these PlaneTags will assist in the preservation of EAA’s B-17 Aluminum Overcast, association officials noted.

About Aluminum Overcast

EAA’s B-17 Aluminum Overcast was delivered to the U.S. Army Air Corps on May 18, 1945.

The airplane was sold as surplus the following year and served many uses, including as a cargo hauler, aerial mapping platform, and in pest control and forest dusting applications.

In 1978, Aluminum Overcast was sold to a group of investors known as “B-17s Around the World” who sought to return the airplane to its military roots. The economic challenges of owning a vintage bomber led the group to donate the airplane to EAA in 1983.

The airplane was on display in the EAA Aviation Museum until 1993 when it was moved to start preparation for its first national tour in 1994.

Aluminum Overcast carries the colors of the 398th Bomb Group of World War II, which flew hundreds of missions over Nazi-held territory during the war. Veterans of the 398th helped finance the B-17’s restoration.

For more information: Shop.EAA.org

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