astixjr wrote:
Happy to hear Capt. Ramirez will recover. He's lucky to be alive. Cutting wheel failures that send pieces into your head are usually fatal! I have some old friends in Tucson who have taken F-105s apart but in most cases, they have used cutting wheels on the wings and fuselage so they may not be much help. How on earth did a F-105 wind up in Guadalaraja?
It is my understanding that the airplane was donated by the U.S. to a group of enthusiasts, for exhibition at the Planetarium.
It seems to me an odd donation since the F-105 has no connection with Mexican aviation at all, but it is nonetheless an F-105 that will survive.
The cutting wheel accident happened simply because:
a.- They were in a rush to disassemble the airplane, because if they did not, the fate of the Thud would have sealed, and it would have been chopped up.
b.- They do not have the right tools for this kind of job. I am sure that the attachment bolts were so rusted / corroded, that it was easier to cut them up than to try to remove them with other methods - again, time was against them.
The Mexican AF removed some of the exhibits that they deemed adequate for their own museum.
The Planetarium [not an aviation museum, really] had amongst others, the following aircraft and parts of aircraft:
A Republic F-105.
A Boeing 707 cockpit.
A reprodution of the Biplane "Caza Microplano Veloz Serie C. TNCA."
A Link Trainer.
An unidentified wooden prop.
An A-T6 metal prop.
A sectioned D.H. Goblin 2 engine for a Vampire airplane.
Assorted meteorological instrumentation.
A sectioned P&W R-2000.
Simulator for landing gear, air brakes and pressurization for A-7D.
A single engine LASA 60 airplane.
Mike:
According to information provided by Mr. Ivan Pena Nesbit on 23 May, the F-105 is going to the Escuela Militar de Aviacion [EMA] Zapopan.
Saludos,
Tulio