This is the place where the majority of the warbird (aircraft that have survived military service) discussions will take place. Specialized forums may be added in the new future
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Thu May 19, 2005 9:54 am

I talked to someone at Elkhart Airshow a couple of years ago who claimed there was a farm full of Avengers in Indiana, though I highly doubt that this is true.

Thu May 19, 2005 11:38 am

no clue as to bu. number, randy haskins might be your man for that info.

B29Gunner's friend...

Thu May 19, 2005 2:35 pm

B29Gunner's friend's barn...

Like Wolverine, the first wishful thought I had was P-43 or P-66.

Great daydreamers think alike?

Come on, just a little clue..., animal, vegetable, mineral, ...fighter, trainer, twin, never registered, never repainted,...



My bet is P-43.

B29Gunner PM me if you like. My Dad was a B-29 CFC gunner from May 1947 until last B-29 flight in 1952: 2600+ hours in 509th at Roswell, and 22nd BW at March with 29 combat missions over Korea. I'll keep even a little hint a secret, so please...?

Thu May 19, 2005 3:05 pm

JBoyle wrote:What's he waiting for? Mustangs to top $3 million? :wink:
I used to live in Missouri...so I'm afraid I'll believe it when I see it.
Until then, I'll have to put it into the TIGHAR file of promises.... :) :) :)


That's the thing, you WONT believe it when you see it! :D And what makes you think it's a Mustang? :lol:

Re: B29Gunner's friend...

Thu May 19, 2005 3:08 pm

L. Thompson wrote:Come on, just a little clue..., animal, vegetable, mineral, ...fighter, trainer, twin, never registered, never repainted,...


Ok ok, one hint. It only has one engine! :wink:

Re: B29Gunner's friend...

Thu May 19, 2005 11:21 pm

B29Gunner wrote:
L. Thompson wrote:Come on, just a little clue..., animal, vegetable, mineral, ...fighter, trainer, twin, never registered, never repainted,...


Ok ok, one hint. It only has one engine! :wink:



Okay...what country? We'll drag it out of you. we have ways of making you talk!!!!!!

Hidden Treasure

Thu May 19, 2005 11:31 pm

Ahhh..one engine, well that rules out the HumbledyPudge Gallipoli Mk. IV.
The Mk IV was the one with the coal-fired cabinheat...don'tchaknow!

Fri May 20, 2005 12:16 am

hi B-29 Gunner:

Give us a really good hint. :wink:

Georgia on my mind (and everybody else's)

Fri May 20, 2005 4:20 am

Nothing else like it - as in "none currently known to exist"? That lets out TBD or F2A or Stuka... Hmmm.

Kaiser BTK... SOC Seagull... Ki-100 radial Tony... Curtiss Shrike...

Naah. I'll go with the P-43 :wink:

Fri May 20, 2005 10:51 am

delete
Last edited by Wolverine on Fri May 27, 2005 11:06 am, edited 1 time in total.

Sat May 21, 2005 9:12 am

Mike,

As to location of the Corsair wreckovery, it looks like Coleville, CA. A pretty nasty accident from the looks of it. Here's the crash report:


Accident occurred Saturday, August 31, 1991 in COLEVILLE, CA
Aircraft: KAMAN HH43 B/F, registration: N53RH
Injuries: 1 Fatal.
THE CERTIFICATED COMMERCIAL HELICOPTER PILOT WAS ENGAGED IN A SALVAGE OPERATION OF THE WRECKAGE OF A WORLD WAR II F-4U CORSAIR, UTILIZING AN EXTERNAL 50 FOOT LONG LINE. ON THE FOURTH TRIP OF THE DAY, THE RADIAL AIRCRAFT ENGINE WITH PROPELLERS ATTACHED, WAS BEING LIFTED FROM RUGGED MOUNTAINOUS TERRAIN AT 11000 FEET MSL. THE ENGINE WAS POSITIONED AT THE EDGE OF A ROCKY GLACIAL CHUTE THAT DESCENDED AT ABOUT A 45 DEG ANGLE. THE DENSITY ALTITUDE OF 13000 FEET AND THE EXTERNAL LOAD WEIGHT, EXCEEDED THE PERFORMANCE CAPABILITY OF THE HELICOPTER. AS THE HELICOPTER ATTEMPTED TO LIFT THE ENGINE, GROUND PERSONNEL OBSERVED THE HELICOPTER IN A NOSE DOWN ATTITUDE. THE MAIN ROTOR BLADES STRUCK SURROUNDING TERRAIN. THE HELICOPTER AND ENGINE TUMBLED DOWN THE MOUNTAIN SIDE, DISINTEGRATING AS IT DESCENDED ABOUT 1/2 MILE DOWNSLOPE. ONE GROUND CREWMEMBER RECEIVED MINOR INJURIES FROM FLYING DEBRIS. THE PILOT RECEIVED FATAL INJURIES.
The National Transportation Safety Board determines the probable cause(s) of this accident as follows:
THE FAILURE OF THE PILOT TO ADEQUATELY CALCULATE THE HELICOPTER PERFORMANCE. CONTRIBUTING TO THE ACCIDENT WAS A DELAY IN JETTISONING THE EXTERNAL LOAD; THE PILOT'S OVERCONFIDENCE IN HIS ABILITIES; AND EXCEEDING OF THE HELICOPTER'S HOVER ABILITY DURING HIGH DENSITY ALTITUDE CONDITIONS.

Mon May 23, 2005 8:23 am

Thanks Rob, I'll pass this on to the VMF-224 member, looks like his bird is indeed been snagged. However he was adamant that it was a -4. He ought to know, he was on the flight when it went down.

Sierra Corsairs

Mon May 23, 2005 1:28 pm

Rob, so to clarify, there still is an FG-1D in a nearby location?
...and your previous post implys the Park Service knows the location?

Mon May 23, 2005 1:46 pm

I have to admit this thread has me really wanting to go visiting farms!

However, if you start to figure the $$ side of all this - wouldn't it be easier to get a group together and make a stop at Courtesy Aircraft then Wyoming and you could fly your own Privateer home for probably less $$ than finding and restoring something else to "static" condition!

Of course its not a Corsair BUT with a flying Privateer you could charge $350 a ride, take 6 people per ride, make 5 flights and you've got $10K on top of the appearance fee and fuel that an air show wuold provide anyway - sound a bit mercenary? Yes, but then to keep the bird in the air you have to look at it that way - and people would jump at the chance - from another thread someone said the CAF charges $750 for a P-51 ride and the waiting list at ONE air show was 20+ people!!

Tom P.

Tue May 24, 2005 8:36 am

yeah, anybody can walk into courtesy, & plunk down $$$$$$ but i think it's the aura of mystery, & the fun of the hunt in finding an old dusty warbird stuck in a barn. i think it's almost of myth status, but it does still exist, & probably under our noses!!!
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