APG85 wrote:
Jeremy S wrote:
The Nova documentary was great, but you can tell that they had to cut a lot of footage. The Book
Hunting Warbirds provides some more insight on this recovery effort (for those who have not read this yet).
http://www.amazon.com/Hunting-Warbirds- ... g+warbirdsThe entire first expedition, where they jacked the airplane (in the lake), lowered the landing gear and got one of the original engines to run, was not covered in the Nova documentary. I think they even used a helicopter to lift barrels and place them on the tail (horizontal stabilizer) to weigh the tail down enough so that the nose would raise high enough to lower the nose gear. This was either in the book or a magazine article I read...
Or by me as I have typed this very information more than once on this topic. Yes the Nova documentary has painted a pretty picture of this tragic story. But seeing the behind the scenes footage, that pretty picture become just like ODDBALL with his paint ammo.
Money was not on their side on this. If it were still there, Paul Allen would have had a much better chance at getting it off using the same method if he so choose.
I am sure that if someday someone decides to go up and fund the recovery of what is left, a large batch of lawyers will be knocking at their door to claim what is theirs. I will be the first to notify a family friend who had 30K in Propeller parts go to the bottom of the lake and he has the paperwork and salvage rights to prove it. Im not a betting man but I am pretty sure those "0" time engines had the same following.
_________________
Long Live the N3N-3 "The Last US Military Bi-Plane" 1940-1959
Badmouthing Stearmans on WIX since 2005
