David Legg wrote:
SaxMan wrote:
Wow...a genuine PBY-5 seaplane, not the 5A Amphibian. How many "straight" 5s are still out there? Can't be that many,
Widening the query slightly so that it covers all flying boat variants (not just PBY-5s) as opposed to amphibians...
Complete airframes:VH-ASA - PB2B-2 Catalina at the Powerhouse Museum, Sydney, NSW, Australia
BuAer08317 - PBY-5 at the National Museum of Naval Aviation, Pensacola, Florida, USA
A24-30 - 'PBY-5 Catalina' actually a composite of a number of aircraft at Lake Boga, N Victoria, Australia
Partially complete airtframes:A24-46 - PBY-5 stored away from public view at Whaleworld, Albany, Western Australia
VA718 - Catalina II wrecked but partially complete at Diego Garcia, Indian Ocean
FP216 - PBY-5B sectioned hull on display below BuAer08317 at the National Museum of Naval Aviation, Pensacola, Florida, USA
Back in the 1990s, the hull of RAAF A24-19 was at Wallan, Victoria, Australia but I believe it was damaged by winds. Can any reader provide an up-to-date status report?
Two PBY-5A's survive converted back to pure Flying Boat configurations.
A24-88 is one of 46 PBY-5A's received for service by the RAAF, and is one of 29 (more than 1/2 of those received) modified back to pure flying boat configuration by the RAAF (at Lake Boga) in a field modification to increase its payload and range for service as a "Black Cat" and replace older PBY-5 aircraft.
It is the sole surviving combat veteran Black Cat in the world, having served operationally with RAAF 42 Sqn in 1944/45 and participated in the mining of Manila Harbour to support General MacArthurs landings, it is now in the collection of the Australian National Aviation Museum at Moorabbin for eventual restoration in its wartime "Flying Boat" configuration.
(It is however also the only survivor from the 49 PBY-5A's that served with the RAAF)
http://www.aarg.com.au/Catalina.htmVH-SBV is a former USAAF Amphibian OA-10A, serial 44-34081, operated in New Guinea as a post war airliner with TAA, and eventually modified back to pure flying boat configuration as its PNG operations were all water based and the increased payload and range were again important benefits, it is now in the collection of the RNZAF museum, being restored as an RNZAF PBY-5.
Not really a flying boat anymore, but the worlds only surviving PBY-4 (Former A29-29) still exists in the form of a hull of a houseboat on the Murray River named Paddle Cat, unfortunately only the hull survives with the fuselage superstructure cut to the water line and replaced with slab sided aluminium house boat structure.
I saw A24-19 up close when it was found sitting in a paddock sitting further north in the Nurmurkah area, and it was a complete hull but with much of the superstructure cut down other than bulkhead positions, I also later saw it from a distance at the Wallan site.
I also heard this was damaged by wind and disappeared after that, - but I do suspect John Bell of Whaleworld acquired it and consumed it into the composite reconstruction of A28-46 - as that airframe was only a nose section and rear fuselage when I saw them stored at the Warbirds of Mildura museum, and many other bits came from the leftovers of the Lake Boga project.
Regards
Mark Pilkington