Brad:
I did find out the story behind the CG4 glider and the R4B helio. Both, at some point prior to my heavy involvement with the CAF, were deemed by the powers that be at the time (the General Staff) to be difficult to impossible to restore to flying condition. The helio used an odd-ball Warner engine that was no longer available (or repairable), and the glider was actually parts and pieces of three or four, with the fuse center section about the only thing recognizable. Hence those two machines were given to the museum side of the CAF (there are actually 4 different corporate entities that make up the CAF...long story about why...). The helio is in museum storage and will eventually become an exhibit. Some parts of the glider were incorporated into a D-Day exhibit here, other parts were sold/loaned/swapped (I'm not sure which) to the Silent Wings museum in Lubbock, and some pieces are in outside storage at HQ.
Re: the airplanes in Harlingen that the CAF "allowed" to be scrapped...actually, I believe those airframes belonged to the Air Force and the city of Harlingen and the AF had final say over them. With the exception of a PBY (not located in Harlingen), everything that could be moved from Harlingen to Midland was moved. (I worked with the guy who oversaw the move; he's my source)...Re: the Mossie bits and pieces...I don't believe the CAF ever owned outright a Mossie, just like the CAF never "owned" the six P-47s that came out of So. America. Lots of rather interesting transactions happened in the old days at Harlingen, and things are a bit hard to trace, but I've got access to all of the logs, etc, of all the airplanes that were officially in the fleet...Not saying those are definitive sources, but one would think they were.
Hope this answered some questions....
Bill Coombes
General Staff
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