- Spud One
Spud One was an informal name adopted by
civil servant s for theBoeing 727 aircraft ofNo. 40 Squadron RNZAF ,Royal New Zealand Air Force carryingPrime Minister Jim Bolger .The RNZAF's three 727s were purchased second hand from Boeing in 1981; All were delivered new to United Airlines in 1968, and sold to the RNZAF second hand by Boeing in 1981. NZ7271 19892 entered service in July 1981, was retired on 7 July 2003 and is now 3D-KMJ. NZ7272 19893 entered service in July 1981, and was retired to Woodbourne as an instructional airframe on 25 August 2003. NZ7273 19895 was the first 727 delivered, on 6 May 1981, but flew only 21 hours, being intended from the start to be a source of spare parts. It was retired 25 June 1981 [http://www.adf-serials.com/nz-serials/nz7271.shtml] .
The 727s were purchased by the administration of Sir
Robert Muldoon and used by the fourth and fifth Labour governments, as well as the administration ofJenny Shipley , but the "spud" nickname was applied to overseas flights by formerNew Zealand Prime Minister Jim Bolger in the early1990 s. The name is a reference toAir Force One . Bolger was nicknamedSpud due to the similarity of his pockmarked face to apotato , or alternatively for the fact that he was an erstwhile potato farmer.The 727s were replaced with two
Boeing 757 s in 2003. [http://www.adf-serials.com/nz-serials/nz7571.shtml] . Some civil servants are known to have branded the 757s as "Broomstick One and Broomstick Two", as a reference to them being transport for Prime MinisterHelen Clark Fact|date=February 2007. The Labour government was criticised by other political parties for updating VIP aircraft while disbanding the RNZAF's combat arm. [http://www.rodneyhide.com/index.php/weblog/comments/last_flight/]
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