In 1948 the State of Finland purchased the aircraft for use by Aero. Its first scheduled passenger flight took place on 21 July 1948, on the Malmi–Vaasa–Tampere–Malmi route. During the following winter the aircraft was furnished for passenger use. It flew until December 1960, when it had flown 22 137 hours. It was then used for spare parts, but was reassembled and fitted with a freight door since Aero needed freight aircraft. It retained its previous registration, and was put back to service after Midsummer 1963. Aero operated the aircraft until 1 April 1967, when it flew Aero’s last DC-3 scheduled passenger flight.[2]
In 1970 the aircraft, along with the other DC-3s owned by Finnair, was sold to the Finnish Air Force, and was given the registration DO-11. In 1985, the Air Force retired its DC-3s. and OH-LCH, along with OH-LCD, were sold to Airveteran Oy. The latter aircraft is now at the Finnish Aviation Museum.[1][2]
Francillon, René. McDonnell Douglas Aircraft Since 1920: Volume I. London: Putnam, 1979. ISBN0-87021-428-4.
Liukkonen, Meri (16 July 2020). "DC-3:n kyydissä avautuvat kaupunkien hulppeat näkymät. Malmin DC-3-konetta ylläpidetään vapaaehtoisten voimin. Koneen kyydissä on myös vietetty monenlaisia perhejuhlia" [‘Flying a DC-3 one gets wonderful views of the cities. The plane at the Malmi Airport is maintained by volunteers. Many family events have also been celebrated aboard the plane’]. Helsingin Sanomat HS Viikko (in Finnish). Helsinki: Sanoma. pp. 8–9.
"DC-3 OH-LCH historia" [‘DC-3 OH-LCH history’] (in Finnish). DC-Association (Finland. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
References
^ abcLiukkonen, Meri (16 July 2020). "DC-3:n kyydissä avautuvat kaupunkien hulppeat näkymät. Malmin DC-3-konetta ylläpidetään vapaaehtoisten voimin. Koneen kyydissä on myös vietetty monenlaisia perhejuhlia" [‘Flying a DC-3 one gets wonderful views of the cities. The plane at the Malmi Airport is maintained by volunteers. Many family events have also been celebrated aboard the plane’]. Helsingin Sanomat HS Viikko (in Finnish). Helsinki: Sanoma. pp. 8–9.
^ abc"DC-3 OH-LCH historia" [‘DC-3 OH-LCH history’] (in Finnish). DC-Association (Finland. Retrieved 20 July 2020.