The Beech factory tour was great although we were not allowed to take pictures. We saw two lines of assemply. The Bonanza and Baron line which utilizes the same fuselage produces a new plane about every three days. They said a new Bonanza starts at around $800K and a new Baron at about $1.500K. The line that makes the various models of King Air's was the other line and it puts out a new plane about every 1 1/2 days. They did not want us passing out so they did not tell us what those cost. Plant IV, which we toured, is about 10 acres under roof. They never heat or cool it and it never gets below 80 F. even in the winter. It seemed odd that we all had to wear safety glasses because the employees didn't. Our guide was excellent and had worked for Beech for over 20 years. He did show us some videos and one of the most memorable for me was the one of the T6 which is a military Bonanza. They have different models including a trainer and another that is armed for combat. Both are turboprop. They are hoping the military decides to buy some of them. Later Friday Linda and I went back to visit Flight Safety where they train Beech pilots on simulators. I have a high school class mate who works there. He had gone back home to Nebraska for the weekend, but his boss was gracious and give us a tour. We saw full motion simulators for everything from the Bonanza to the Beech Jet. She allowed us to board a Beech Jet simulator. We aren't sure, but it looked like they had from between 15 and 20 huge simulators for the various Beech models. On Saturday Bob Schmidt with Mark and his buddy, Steve Powers and I and LInda all flew to Stearman Field at Benton, KS which is 7 miles N.E. of Jabara. They were having their annual Stearman fly-in and car show. We met Don Olson and his wife there who hangar their Sierra on that field. He brought his Sierra out to park it next to ours as it is the same year, make and model as ours and has the identical red, white and blue paint job. We had lunch there while a band began to entertain the crowd. Before we left, 5 military helicopters flew in. I cannot tell you what models they were, but there did not appear armed and had the large round globe above the rotors. I think that is for radar. The weather was plenty warm with highs about 90 F. However, storms did stay away. Saturday and Sunday the WWII bomber Memphis Belle was giving rides at Jabara. They frequently went over Stearman field while we were they. None of us had rides in it as they cost about $450. Even the Stearman rides were $150 so our group did not take one of those either. Steve Powers did fly over to and land at the Belmont Hotel grass strip. He said it was very well kept. It will make a great fly-in some day. I did not count, but I think there were 8 to 10 Musketeers on the line in our group at Jabara. They were impressed.