Hamilton Lancaster UK tour ends with $180K engine repair bill - Action News
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Hamilton

Hamilton Lancaster UK tour ends with $180K engine repair bill

After a wildly successful British tour, Hamiltons Lancaster bomber is about to finally head home but with an expensive bill in tow and an adoring public eager to help pay.

Second World War plane starts return journey home Tuesday

Canada's Lancaster bomber, pictured here along a British Lanc, is flying with some borrowed parts after one of its engines broke during a flight near Durham Tees Airport in northern England. (Gordon Elias/Ministry of Defence/Associated Press)

After a wildly successful British tour, Hamiltons Lancaster bomber is about to finally head home but with an expensive bill in tow.

The crew of the beloved plane is leaving the UK Tuesday morning at 5 a.m. ET on its way back to Hamilton, making stops in Iceland and Newfoundland before heading home to the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum.

The return trip will be aided by an engine borrowed from a British company. The borrowed engine has been in place since one of the planes four engines shut down a few weeks ago while on tour with a British Lancaster. The borrowed engine will be shipped back overseas once the crew gets home while the original gets repaired for about $180,000.

Flying old aircraft certainly isnt cheap, said Al Mickeloff, the museums marketing manager who is travelling with the Second World War bomber on its tour of British airshows.

But an outpouring of support from both sides of the Atlantic has helped offset the cost of the engine and some of the missed airshows while the bomber was grounded.

Mickeloff said hes been overwhelmed by the support from British aviation groups and regular citizens. The Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum even had to alter its website so scores of donations in British pounds could pour in.

That kind of intense love for the old aircraft is indicative of the pure enthusiasm people have for seeing it in the air, Mickeloff says. Its been unbelievable, he said. We expected to be popular over here, but were 100 times more popular than we even expected.

Many of the people who are the most invested in the shows are veterans who will likely never get the chance to see two Lancasters fly in formation over their heads ever again. It usually brings a tear to their eye they havent seen two Lancasters fly together in 50 years.

But the enthusiasm isnt limited to people in their nineties, he said. People see them and remember their parents and their grandparents.

Though the plane leaves Tuesday, the Lancasters crew likely wont get home until Friday or into the weekend. Theyre facing headwinds this time the whole way back, and theres less urgency to get there for a specific show date.

Though after two months, everyone is anxious to get home, Mickelhoff said.

We dont want the tour to end but its time to get back to our family and friends.