Dan Jones wrote:
Not knowing the dimensions off the top of my head, I'm not sure that a B-29 fuselage would even fit in the back of a Herc. I think the diameter would be too large. Flying it out on it's own steam was probably the only realistic way to get it out of there without spending literally millions.
Dan, before I retired from loadmastering I worked on some certification letters and load plans to get some warbirds to Hawaii for the big naval aviation anniversary. The money disappeared and that whole thing never really came to anything. Out of morbid curiosity I did load plan to find out if I could get a B-29 in a C-17 or C-130. It would have taken three C-17 trips or eight C-130 trips. That was in a perfect world with pallets, dunnage, K-loaders and all that stuff. Just as you were wondering, the B-29 fuselage wouldn't fit height wise. It could have been made to fit but not without significant disassembly. You could get it all in two C-5 trips though.
So, could it have been carried out in a C-130? Yes, with great difficulty and disassembly, technically speaking. But not practically or realistically speaking.
My personal opinion, having made a living in the airlift world and having a fair amount of experience with B-29s is this: The idea that the airplane could have made it out anyway except under its own power is pretty ridicules when you consider the sheer logistics required to do it piece by piece. Could it have been done? Yes I believe so. But at cost that was far beyond any dollar value that the airplane would have ever been worth, regardless of how perfect the restoration was.