Dan K wrote:
Noha307 wrote:
f4intel wrote:
Is it just me or does it seem like gear-related mishaps seem to be the bane of the Warbird movement?
You're telling me.
I had understood that the damage to P-40M 43-5813 was caused by a leaking oil cooler resulting in complete engine failure, and that the gear damage occured after the plane left the runway while landing deadstick.
http://www.ntsb.gov/_layouts/ntsb.aviat ... 111&akey=1Seems kind of a stretch to label this episode a "gear-related mishap"...or is there more to the story than the NTSB reported?
Yeah, you're right. The accident was due to a leaking oil cooler and the further damage on landing was a result of the fact he was going too fast for the runway and went off the end. One of the landing gear folded under due to the latter, which is what I was thinking when I wrote the above. The landing gear collapse was more of a result than a cause. Sorry to confuse.
Richard W. wrote:
As I understand it virtually none, when recovered the remains were noted as 'bite sized chunks.' Photos taken when the original group was rebuilding it show all new structure.
Okay, that's kinda what I figured. Makes me feel a bit better. Thanks for the info.
If you don't mind, where did they find the wreck? I've always pictured it being recovered from the side of one of Hawaii's more remote mountains.
Tim Savage wrote:
Noha307 wrote:
This is the Pearl Harbor survivor, correct? I've always wondered, how much of that aircraft is actually original?
This is one of the warbirds I've always had a problem with the idea of being airworthy.
Thus the beauty of the free market system. If you have a problem with it you can pony up the 3 million or so and try to buy it. However, without a massive infusion of cash from a private individual it would still be a pile of parts in the back of a hangar at Torrance. That private individual wouldn't have put the money into it if it couldn't be flown.
Just expressing my opinion. I'm not trying to get into a heated argument here, so sorry if it seemed that way.
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