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The new Battle of Burma: Find 20 buried Spitfires and make them fly
Daily Mail ^
Posted on 04/14/2012 4:37:22 AM PDT by nuconvert
Historic planes buried in Second World War are to be shipped back to Britain after their mystery locations were discovered
War leaders did not want them to fall into foreign hands when they demobilised in 1945
Hidden in crates at a depth of 4ft to 6ft the RAF then forgot where they were
Twenty brand-new RAF Spitfires could soon reach for the sky following a deal reached with Burma yesterday. Experts believe they have discovered the locations of around 20 of the Second World War fighters buried at airfields around the country. David Cameron has secured an agreement that they will be returned to Britain.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aerospace; aviation; britain; burma; raf; spitfires; wwii
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To: nuconvert
I don’t see how MK II Spits, the main model in 1940 Battle of Britain, could have been in Burma at this late stage of the war.
Burma campaign usually got the low priority for new models, Hurricanes were still flying there in 1945 when they had been taken out of action in most other theaters.
Mk Vs or MK VIIIs, yes. But then again if they are MK II’s that would be quite amazing; they are quite rare, as are the Hawker Hurricane.
21
posted on
04/14/2012 7:10:28 AM PDT
by
wolficatZ
("We are no longer accepting comments on this article")
To: nuconvert
One of the most aesthetically pleasing aircraft that has ever flown!
22
posted on
04/14/2012 7:17:52 AM PDT
by
Reily
To: nuconvert
23
posted on
04/14/2012 7:22:36 AM PDT
by
KyGeezer
Click
24
posted on
04/14/2012 7:27:17 AM PDT
by
RedMDer
(https://support.woundedwarriorproject.org/default.aspx?tsid=93)
To: nuconvert
Wow! That is really neat.
25
posted on
04/14/2012 7:29:40 AM PDT
by
RedMDer
(https://support.woundedwarriorproject.org/default.aspx?tsid=93)
To: tomkat
Doesn’t Connie Edwards have an operational one at his place in West Texas?
26
posted on
04/14/2012 7:35:16 AM PDT
by
nuke rocketeer
(File CONGRESS.SYS corrupted: Re-boot Washington D.C (Y/N)?)
To: KyGeezer
To: tanknetter
When the Americans retreated before Burgoyne`s advance in 1777, they abandoned some forts with 400 cannon, but had previously hidden the powder in concealed underground bunkers far from the forts. Burgoyne`s inventories tell of the missing powder. One of his Tory spies told him of the powder buried elsewhere but only gave him a 2 mile radius of the location. These powder bunkers were apparently forgotten, do not appear in any records after that. They appear to be still there. They also hid uniforms and muskets in several caves; one cave was discovered by local boys in 1952 with muskets and decayed uniforms. One hidden musket with bayonet was discovered by my nephew 1/4 mile from one of the caves.
Burgoyne`s paymaster`s ship, loaded with 10,000 gold coins to pay the German rear guard echelons in Vermont and NY sailed late from Canada down Lake Champlain, failed to meet the rear guards because of American ambushes on the latter. The paymaster sunk the ship in a river near Whitehall, NY -
It was discovered by a civil engineer doing a land survey in 1902 who noticed that the river`s course had changed and exposed the riverbed with the ship. He recovered the treasure chest and snuck it into a bank vault in Vermont coz NY State would have claimed it. I do not know what happened to it after that.
28
posted on
04/14/2012 7:59:48 AM PDT
by
bunkerhill7
(hidden hoards?? ???? Who knew?)
To: wolficatZ
I think these must be Mark VIIs. India/Burma theater started with VCs and later added VIIIs and then extra VIIs from Italy. VIIs would make more sense than Mark IIs.
29
posted on
04/14/2012 8:00:41 AM PDT
by
Kirkwood
(Zombie Hunter)
To: PhiloBedo
I seriously doubt they are MK IIs, since they were replaced in ‘41 by the MK V. Most likely the are MK XIs and someone not knowledgeable decided to write 11 rather than the roman numeral XI
To: nuconvert
Picture I took at the Lone Star Flight Museum Air Show 2005. Not sure if it's still part of their collection.
31
posted on
04/14/2012 8:40:27 AM PDT
by
smokingfrog
( sleep with one eye open (<o> ---)
To: PhiloBedo
This is AMAZING. 20 of them. Thatll bring the Spit back from the brink of extinction. I look forward to more information, like what Mk number they are.
According to WikiAnswers there are something like 20 flying Spits in the UK alone, and about 40 world-wide.
This guy seems to have a pretty good, detailed list of flying Spits. I wouldn't call the Spit on the brink of extinction at all, especially considering the dearth of other flying types (lets start with the few flying F6F Hellcats, for instance, and the one flying SB2C Helldiver)
To: tanknetter
On a kinda related note, this week will see the 70th Anniversary of the Doolittle Raid.
The annual Raiders reunion is being held at the National Museum of the USAF in Dayton Ohio. All five living Raiders will be there, and the plan is to fly at least 25 B-25 Mitchells into Wright Field for the event. Yes, that number is TWENTY-FIVE Mitchells - it's being billed as the largest gathering of B-25s since they left squadron service at the end of WWII. They're already gathering the birds this weekend in Urbana OH (Grimes Field). Some of the Michell crews are offering paid flights in their birds.
Freepers in the area should seriously consider making it to this. There've been suggestions that this'll be the last public Raiders reunion, so NMUSAF and other other involved organizations are really pulling out the stops.
To: KyGeezer
I remember reading about it. Thanks for the link.
34
posted on
04/14/2012 11:13:25 AM PDT
by
nuconvert
( Khomeini promised change too // Hail, Chairman O)
To: tanknetter
Wow. How neat would that be to see!
35
posted on
04/14/2012 11:15:00 AM PDT
by
nuconvert
( Khomeini promised change too // Hail, Chairman O)
To: PhiloBedo
Article says that they are Mk II’s. Doesn’t seem right considering that they were buried in 1945. The Mk II’s would have been current in 1940/41, ie. Battle of Britain. Still possible, I guess. That’s a long-@ss supply pipeline from the UK to CBI Theater!
36
posted on
04/14/2012 12:31:26 PM PDT
by
Tallguy
(It's all 'Fun and Games' until somebody loses an eye!)
To: Reily
One of the most aesthetically pleasing aircraft that has ever flown! Agreed. A beautiful aircraft.
37
posted on
04/14/2012 1:43:08 PM PDT
by
Scoutmaster
(You knew the job was dangerous when you took it)
To: tanknetter
If you can get a ride in a B-25, do it. I was able to ride in a B-25 last year. One of the other passengers flew B-17s and was a B-25 instructor during WWII. It was a great opportunity.
To: central_va
Don’t need to find buried FW-190s, this German company is building new ones:
http://www.flugwerk.de/html/page.php?GID=19&SID=4
Check it out. I visited the factory when I was in Germany last and met the owner, Claus Colling, and his lovely wife. They showed my brother and I the FW-190s then in production, and I got to sit in one. Each plane is a combination of authentic parts (tail wheel assemblies, flight instruments, etc.) and new construction...
39
posted on
04/14/2012 2:40:27 PM PDT
by
LifePath
To: LifePath
You don’t suppose we can claim one or two of those for the Smithsonian, as partial payment for war debts?
40
posted on
04/14/2012 3:24:55 PM PDT
by
Publius6961
("It's easy to make promises you can't keep" - B.H.Obama Feb 23, 2012)
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