Skip to content
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Email

Purchase your PlaneTags Festival V Tickets Here

A question? Visit our contact page

  • Shop
    • Commercial Aircraft
    • Vintage Aircraft
    • Helicopter
    • General Aviation
    • Shop All
      • PlaneTags Coasters

        Enjoy Your Favorite Libation In Style

      • Digital Gift Cards:

        $30, $50, $100

  • PlaneTags Coasters
  • Archived PlaneTags
  • Misc & Apparel
  • Blog
  • Gift Cards
  • Albania (USD $)
  • Algeria (USD $)
  • Andorra (USD $)
  • Angola (USD $)
  • Anguilla (USD $)
  • Antigua & Barbuda (USD $)
  • Argentina (USD $)
  • Armenia (USD $)
  • Aruba (USD $)
  • Australia (USD $)
  • Austria (USD $)
  • Azerbaijan (USD $)
  • Bahamas (USD $)
  • Bahrain (USD $)
  • Bangladesh (USD $)
  • Barbados (USD $)
  • Belgium (USD $)
  • Belize (USD $)
  • Benin (USD $)
  • Bermuda (USD $)
  • Bhutan (USD $)
  • Bolivia (USD $)
  • Bosnia & Herzegovina (USD $)
  • Botswana (USD $)
  • Brazil (USD $)
  • British Virgin Islands (USD $)
  • Brunei (USD $)
  • Bulgaria (USD $)
  • Burkina Faso (USD $)
  • Burundi (USD $)
  • Cambodia (USD $)
  • Cameroon (USD $)
  • Canada (USD $)
  • Cape Verde (USD $)
  • Caribbean Netherlands (USD $)
  • Cayman Islands (USD $)
  • Chad (USD $)
  • Chile (USD $)
  • China (USD $)
  • Colombia (USD $)
  • Comoros (USD $)
  • Cook Islands (USD $)
  • Costa Rica (USD $)
  • Croatia (USD $)
  • Curaçao (USD $)
  • Cyprus (USD $)
  • Czechia (USD $)
  • Denmark (USD $)
  • Djibouti (USD $)
  • Dominica (USD $)
  • Dominican Republic (USD $)
  • Ecuador (USD $)
  • Egypt (USD $)
  • El Salvador (USD $)
  • Equatorial Guinea (USD $)
  • Estonia (USD $)
  • Eswatini (USD $)
  • Ethiopia (USD $)
  • Falkland Islands (USD $)
  • Faroe Islands (USD $)
  • Fiji (USD $)
  • Finland (USD $)
  • France (USD $)
  • French Guiana (USD $)
  • French Polynesia (USD $)
  • Gabon (USD $)
  • Gambia (USD $)
  • Georgia (USD $)
  • Germany (USD $)
  • Ghana (USD $)
  • Gibraltar (USD $)
  • Greece (USD $)
  • Greenland (USD $)
  • Grenada (USD $)
  • Guadeloupe (USD $)
  • Guatemala (USD $)
  • Guernsey (USD $)
  • Guinea (USD $)
  • Guinea-Bissau (USD $)
  • Guyana (USD $)
  • Haiti (USD $)
  • Honduras (USD $)
  • Hong Kong SAR (USD $)
  • Hungary (USD $)
  • Iceland (USD $)
  • India (USD $)
  • Indonesia (USD $)
  • Ireland (USD $)
  • Israel (USD $)
  • Italy (USD $)
  • Jamaica (USD $)
  • Japan (USD $)
  • Jersey (USD $)
  • Jordan (USD $)
  • Kazakhstan (USD $)
  • Kenya (USD $)
  • Kiribati (USD $)
  • Kuwait (USD $)
  • Kyrgyzstan (USD $)
  • Laos (USD $)
  • Latvia (USD $)
  • Lesotho (USD $)
  • Liechtenstein (USD $)
  • Lithuania (USD $)
  • Luxembourg (USD $)
  • Macao SAR (USD $)
  • Madagascar (USD $)
  • Malawi (USD $)
  • Malaysia (USD $)
  • Maldives (USD $)
  • Malta (USD $)
  • Martinique (USD $)
  • Mauritania (USD $)
  • Mauritius (USD $)
  • Mayotte (USD $)
  • Mexico (USD $)
  • Moldova (USD $)
  • Monaco (USD $)
  • Mongolia (USD $)
  • Montenegro (USD $)
  • Montserrat (USD $)
  • Morocco (USD $)
  • Mozambique (USD $)
  • Namibia (USD $)
  • Nauru (USD $)
  • Nepal (USD $)
  • Netherlands (USD $)
  • New Caledonia (USD $)
  • New Zealand (USD $)
  • Nicaragua (USD $)
  • Nigeria (USD $)
  • Niue (USD $)
  • North Macedonia (USD $)
  • Norway (USD $)
  • Oman (USD $)
  • Pakistan (USD $)
  • Panama (USD $)
  • Papua New Guinea (USD $)
  • Paraguay (USD $)
  • Peru (USD $)
  • Philippines (USD $)
  • Poland (USD $)
  • Portugal (USD $)
  • Qatar (USD $)
  • Réunion (USD $)
  • Romania (USD $)
  • Rwanda (USD $)
  • Samoa (USD $)
  • San Marino (USD $)
  • São Tomé & Príncipe (USD $)
  • Saudi Arabia (USD $)
  • Senegal (USD $)
  • Serbia (USD $)
  • Seychelles (USD $)
  • Sierra Leone (USD $)
  • Singapore (USD $)
  • Slovakia (USD $)
  • Slovenia (USD $)
  • Solomon Islands (USD $)
  • South Africa (USD $)
  • South Korea (USD $)
  • Spain (USD $)
  • Sri Lanka (USD $)
  • St. Barthélemy (USD $)
  • St. Helena (USD $)
  • St. Kitts & Nevis (USD $)
  • St. Lucia (USD $)
  • St. Martin (USD $)
  • St. Vincent & Grenadines (USD $)
  • Suriname (USD $)
  • Sweden (USD $)
  • Switzerland (USD $)
  • Taiwan (USD $)
  • Tanzania (USD $)
  • Thailand (USD $)
  • Timor-Leste (USD $)
  • Togo (USD $)
  • Tonga (USD $)
  • Trinidad & Tobago (USD $)
  • Tunisia (USD $)
  • Türkiye (USD $)
  • Turks & Caicos Islands (USD $)
  • Tuvalu (USD $)
  • Uganda (USD $)
  • United Arab Emirates (USD $)
  • United Kingdom (USD $)
  • United States (USD $)
  • Uruguay (USD $)
  • Uzbekistan (USD $)
  • Vanuatu (USD $)
  • Vietnam (USD $)
  • Zambia (USD $)
Login
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Email
Search
MotoArt PlaneTags
  • ShopShop
      • Commercial Aircraft
      • Vintage Aircraft
      • Helicopter
      • General Aviation
      • Shop All
      View All PlaneTags
    • PlaneTags Coasters

      Enjoy Your Favorite Libation In Style

    • Digital Gift Cards:

      $30, $50, $100

  • PlaneTags CoastersPlaneTags Coasters
  • Archived PlaneTagsArchived PlaneTags
  • Misc & ApparelMisc & Apparel
  • BlogBlog
  • Gift CardsGift Cards
Search Login Cart 0
Cart

Your cart is currently empty.

Not sure where to start?
Try these collections:

  • Shop PlaneTags
Spend $124.95 more to qualify for free domestic shipping!
    Order special instructions
    Estimate shipping rates
    Taxes included and shipping calculated at checkout.
    Subtotal
    $0.00 USD
    View cart
    Recently viewed
    Search

    We use cookies

    This site uses cookies for better user experience and analytics.

    Access Denied
    IMPORTANT! If you’re a store owner, please make sure you have Customer accounts enabled in your Store Admin, as you have customer based locks set up with EasyLockdown app. Enable Customer Accounts
    T-28C Trojan: A Trainer For A New Generation of Naval Aviators
    • Sep 02, 2021
    • by Dianna Lopez

    T-28C Trojan: A Trainer For A New Generation of Naval Aviators

    • Sep 02, 2021
    • by Dianna Lopez

    Tens of thousands of aviators and airmen were trained during World War II - The U.S. Navy alone, for example, produced 61,658 pilots between 1942 and 1945. After WWII, the US military required a trainer aircraft to train a new generation of pilots. The T-28 Trojan was that aircraft, and BuNo 140597 was one of 299 T-28C trainers used for Training the Best for America’s Defense! Let’s learn more about the Trojan and how MotoArt has endeavored to preserve one special plane.

     

    What is the T-28 Trojan?

    The North American Aviation T-28 Trojan is a piston-engined military trainer aircraft produced for the US military between 1950 and 1957. Besides being a high performance advanced trainer, Trojans were also used as counter insurgency (COIN) aircraft during the Vietnam War. They were designed to replace the T-6/SNJ Texan.

    A U.S. Navy North American T-28B Trojan (BuNo 138157) of Training Squadron VT-2 pictured in flight near Naval Air Station Whiting Field, Florida (USA), circa 1973. By U.S. Navy - U.S. Navy National Museum of Naval Aviation photo No. 1996.488.162.128, Public Domain, Link

    After World War II, the military required a new trainer to replace the North American T-6 Texan. The XT-28 prototype took its first flight on September 24, which led to the production of the T-28A. Suitability tests performed by the 3200th Fighter Test Squadron found the Trojan satisfactory. 1,948 were built from 1950 to 1957. They became the first trainer designed to train pilots for the new jet powered aircraft that were now in service.

     

    By U.S. Navy - U.S. Navy National Museum of Naval Aviation photo No. 1996.488.162.128, Public Domain, Link 

    The T-28 made an ideal plane for flight training. They were powerful, but easily flown and predictable. They could be used for basic or advanced flight training, instrument, tactical and aerial gunnery. Generations of Navy and Marine servicemen became aviators and learned to land on aircraft carriers using the T-28C. T-28s, in some variant, were used as trainers or in combat by all US forces and nearly two dozen nations around the world. They remain popular warbirds to this day.

     

    T-28 Trojan Variants

    • XT-28 - Prototype, 2 were built
    • T-28A - USAF
    • T-28B - USN
    • T-28C - USN, equipped with a tail hook and other modifications for aircraft carrier deck landing training. 299 were built.
    • T-28D Nomad - T-28s converted for COIN (counter insurgency) role
    • AT-28D - USAF
    • T-28S Fennec (Desert Fox) - T-28As modified for the Armée de l'Air Française (French Army) by Sud-Aviation. Weaponry anchor points were added under the wings, and it could then be armed with bombs, .50 machine guns, or rocket launchers.

    T-28C Specs

    T-28C Trojan

    Drawing by Rob Schneider

    Characteristics:

    • Manufacturer: North American Aviation
    • Serial #: 140597
    • Crew: 2
    • Empty Weight: 6,424 LBS
    • Wing Span: 40 FT 1 IN
    • Length: 33 FT 1 IN
    • Height: 12 FT 8 IN

    Performance:

    • Max Takeoff: 8,300 LBS
    • Range: 1,060 NM
    • Max Cruise Speed: 330 KTS
    • Ceiling: 35,500 FT
    • Rate of Climb: 3,540 FT/Minute
    • Engine: 1x Wright R-1820 Cyclone

     

    Enjoy this T-28C Training video, showing an arrested landing.

    North American Aviation

    NAA was a major American aerospace manufacturer, headquartered in Los Angeles, California. Over the years, after being sold and merged, they became North American Rockwell, then Rockwell International, which later became part of Boeing.

    In addition to its very capable trainers, they produced some of the most historic aircraft including:

    • P-51 Mustang
    • B-25 Mitchell
    • F-86 Sabre
    • P/F-82 Twin Mustang
    • B-1 Lancer (Rockwell)
    • X-15

    They were also involved in early nuclear development, with success in developing nuclear reactors and technology, and navigation systems, radar, data systems and the guidance systems for the Minuteman missile program. For the space program, their division Rocketdyne designed rocket engines and are responsible for the S-II second stage Saturn V and for the Apollo command and service module. The legacy of the ingenuity of NAA continues today.

     

    BuNo 140597

    This T-28C was delivered to the U.S. Navy in December 1956. It served at Naval Air Station Whiting Field, in Milton, Florida. Since its creation in 1943, NAS Whiting Field has been the pillar of the Navy’s flight program, training aviators continuously for nearly 80 years. Whiting Field employed the largest single concentration of T-28s.

    By US Navy - Whiting Field, Public Domain, Link 

    T-28s were used to train prop students in the fundamentals of basic instruments and tactics, then aerobatics, formation, and air to air gunnery, progressing to carrier training. BuNo 140597 was mainly assigned to Training Squadrons VT-3 and VT-2, but also spent some time with VT-6 and VT-5.

    Notably, at the pinnacle of the Vietnam War in 1968, VT-3 had 174 instructors and 162 T-28s flying nearly 110,000 instructional hours, setting a record for any training squadron in Naval Air Training History. Read more about Whiting Field history.

     

    T-28C PlaneTags

     

    During the mid 70’s, T-28s began being phased out in favor of turboshaft engines and helicopters. 140597 was transferred to Military Aircraft Storage and Disposition Center (MASDC, now called AMARG, located at Davis-Monthan AFB) in February 1975, and struck off charge in November 1975. It remained in storage until it was sold at a Department of Defense sale in May 1982. Like many T-28s, it was sold to a private operator. However, this plane was never civil registered or restored. In 2021, it was sold at auction in Texas, which is how MotoArt obtained it.

    Take a look at these records provided by the National Naval Aviation Museum:

    1, 2, 3

     

    Creating an aviation keepsake

    T-28C MotoArt

     

    MotoArt owner Dave Hall found out about some T-28 projects which were being auctioned in Sherman, Texas. He knew right away that they had to be preserved. “Completing our encyclopedia of aircraft has become somewhat of an obsession with us,” says Hall. “We were excited about the possibility of adding a T-28C to the fleet.”

     

     

    Hall acquired BuNo 140597 and it was brought back to MotoArt Studios in Torrance, California. The team got to work cutting the fuselage skin from the plane.

     

    cutting PlaneTags

     

    The skin is cut into smaller sections to avoid cutting into the framework. This also makes it easier for the team to cut them into the familiar oval shape. The PlaneTags are laser etched, cleaned, assembled and are ready to be sent out to customers all over the world.

     

    The Finished Product

    The manufacturing process is important to Hall, and the entire team. Each piece is examined to ensure that quality is consistent and the product is ready for customers and collectors. The same care is taken with the packaging design. The results of this collective effort among the team is an aviation keepsake that will live on for decades to come.

     

    The North American T-28C Trojan PlaneTags are numbered to 5,000, a limited edition. The colors available are:

    • White
    • Orange
    • Metal
    • Black/White

    With most releases, combination colors tend to sell out within hours because there are not as many, and they are also more unusual than solid colors for the most part. However, all PlaneTags are unique - they are individually numbered and they each have characteristics like dents, scratches, scrapes, oxidation and the wear and tear you might expect from an aircraft that had an active life. Although #140597 isn’t able to speak for itself, Hall hopes that he and the team can give it a voice and tell some of its tale. For more information on T-28C Trojan PlaneTags, see www.planetags.com.

    Share:

    • Share on Facebook
    • Tweet on Twitter
    • Pin on Pinterest
    • Share by Email
    Share
    Share
    • Facebook Share on Facebook
    • Twitter Tweet on Twitter
    • Pinterest Pin on Pinterest
    • E-mail Share by Email
    0 comments
      • Aug 19, 2021
      • by Dianna Lopez

      Convair CV-580: Expanding On Greatness

      • Sep 16, 2021
      • by Dianna Lopez

      Hawker Sea Fury: From Fighter to Racer

    Latest Stories

    View all

    SR-71 Blackbird News: 2 Days Until New SR-71 PlaneTags Release
    • Jul 08, 2025
    • 0 comments

    SR-71 Blackbird News: 2 Days Until New SR-71 PlaneTags Release

    The Countdown to SR-71 PlaneTags Begins Now!  In just 2 days, you’ll have the chance to own a piece of aviation history with the SR-71 PlaneTags. Crafted from the actual stabilizer of the legendary SR-71 Blackbird, these limited edition PlaneTags...

    Read more

    SR-71 PlaneTags: How MotoArt Preserved a Piece of Blackbird History
    • Jul 03, 2025
    • 0 comments

    SR-71 PlaneTags: How MotoArt Preserved a Piece of Blackbird History

    The SR-71 Blackbird is one of the most iconic aircraft ever built, known for its unparalleled speed, high-altitude capabilities, and groundbreaking design. Developed by Lockheed’s Skunk Works during the Cold War, the SR-71 was designed to be the fastest and highest-flying reconnaissance aircraft in history. With speeds reaching Mach 3.35 (2,200 mph) and cruising altitudes exceeding 85,000 feet, it set records that have yet to be broken.

    Now, you can own a piece of this aviation legend. MotoArt has meticulously crafted exclusive SR-71 PlaneTags from the actual parts of the aircraft, allowing aviation enthusiasts and collectors to hold a piece of history in their hands. These PlaneTags offer a unique opportunity to connect with the SR-71 in a way that was never before possible.

    Read more

    The SR-71 Blackbird: A Legacy of Speed and Innovation
    • Jun 27, 2025
    • 0 comments

    The SR-71 Blackbird: A Legacy of Speed and Innovation

    For aviation enthusiasts and collectors, the SR-71’s legacy continues to captivate. Now, you have the opportunity to own a piece of this legendary aircraft through SR-71 PlaneTags, crafted from the very materials that made this remarkable plane a star of the skies. But before we dive into the story of these unique collectibles, let’s take a look back at the SR-71’s incredible journey and its lasting impact on the world of aviation. Sign up for exclusive access today. 

    Read more

    Invalid password
    Enter

    MotoArt PlaneTags

    ABOUT US
    • How It's Made
    • Store Locator
    • FAQ
    • Blog
    • MotoArt
    • Affiliate Program
    • Frequent Flyer Program
    • PlaneTags Encyclopedia
    CUSTOMER SERVICE
    • Military - First Responder Discount
    • Contact Us
    • Return Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    ACCOUNT
    • Sign Up
    • Login
    • Orders

    Stay in the loop with our weekly newsletter

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Email
    © 2025 MotoArt PlaneTags. Designed and Developed by BreadLoaf
    • American Express
    • Apple Pay
    • Diners Club
    • Discover
    • Google Pay
    • Mastercard
    • PayPal
    • Shop Pay
    • Visa
    • Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
    • Opens in a new window.