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  #1  
Old 26-04-12, 10:22
bill m bill m is offline
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Default P40 discovered in Egypt

Some of you have probably already seen these photos but for those who haven't enjoy...
https://picasaweb.google.com/1146825...at=directlink#
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  #2  
Old 26-04-12, 12:29
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Default p40

Amazing condition.
Marvelous what a lack of rain will do.
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  #3  
Old 26-04-12, 13:17
Luke R Luke R is offline
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Default P40

Do we know if there is going to be a recovery and restoration of the aircraft?

Luke
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  #4  
Old 26-04-12, 14:58
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Default Battery

Did anyone notice the Australian made dry cell battery !
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1940 cab 11 C8
1940 Morris-Commercial PU
1941 Morris-Commercial CS8
1940 Chev. 15cwt GS Van ( Aust.)
1942-45 Jeep salad
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  #5  
Old 26-04-12, 20:18
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Hanno Spoelstra Hanno Spoelstra is offline
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Amazing discovery.

I hope they preserve, rather than "restore" it!

H.
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  #6  
Old 26-04-12, 20:32
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Yep, I would take a bunch more pics and set it up exactly as found, rocks and all.
The crash sure broke up the Allison!
The propeller pic brought back memories. We found just about that much of a P40 sticking up out of the sand at Boundary Bay in about 1960. It crashed in WWII and they didn't clean up the site all that good!
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1940 Cab 11 C8 Wireless with 1A2 box & 11 set
1940 Cab 11 C8 cab and chassis
1940 Cab 11 C15 with 2A1 & Motley mount & Lewis gun
1940 Cab 11 F15A w/ Chev rear ends
1941 Cab 12 F15A
1942-44 Cab 13 F15A x 5
1942 cab 13 F15A with 2B1 box
1943 cab 13 F15A with 2H1 box
1943 Cab 13 C8A HUP
1944 Cab 13 C15A with 2C1 box
1943 Cletrac M2 High Speed Tractor
MkII Bren gun carrier chassis x 2
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  #7  
Old 26-04-12, 21:24
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Default Canadians will be pleased



According to Vintage Wings, this was a Canadian 260 Sqn aircraft. Read the story here.
Attached Thumbnails
HS-BTitle.jpg  
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  #8  
Old 27-04-12, 00:27
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stumbling onto that would be amazing.
I wonder what other treasures are hidden on our planet.
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  #9  
Old 27-04-12, 01:18
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A local chap was a Spitfire pilot in WW2. Around 1942 he was listed as missing in action in North Africa and nothing more was discovered until the early 1960s. His plane was found intact in the Sahara with him still in the pilots seat.
It seems he came to a stop against a dune in a sand storm and was buried there. 25 years later the sand blew away and exposed the plane.
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1940 Cab 11 C8 Wireless with 1A2 box & 11 set
1940 Cab 11 C8 cab and chassis
1940 Cab 11 C15 with 2A1 & Motley mount & Lewis gun
1940 Cab 11 F15A w/ Chev rear ends
1941 Cab 12 F15A
1942-44 Cab 13 F15A x 5
1942 cab 13 F15A with 2B1 box
1943 cab 13 F15A with 2H1 box
1943 Cab 13 C8A HUP
1944 Cab 13 C15A with 2C1 box
1943 Cletrac M2 High Speed Tractor
MkII Bren gun carrier chassis x 2
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  #10  
Old 11-05-12, 12:26
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Keith Webb View Post
According to Vintage Wings, this was a Canadian 260 Sqn aircraft. Read the story here.
And according to the Daily Mail it crashed while "Ft Sgt Copping and another airman were (...) flying two damaged Kittyhawk P-40 planes (like this one) from one British airbase in northern Egypt to another for repair".

H.
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  #11  
Old 11-05-12, 14:46
Alex Blair (RIP) Alex Blair (RIP) is offline
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Default British RAF Sqn.history..

Quote:
No.260 Squadron was a fighter squadron that briefly served in Scotland, before moving to the Mediterranean, where it remained for the rest of the war, acting as a fighter-bomber squadron.

The squadron was reformed on 22 November 1940, and became operational in the north of Scotland, flying a mix of air defence and convoy patrols. In April 1941 the squadron was withdrawn to prepare to move overseas, and in August it reached Egypt. On 11 August the squadron resumed operations, providing part of the air defence of Palestine and the Lebanon.

In October the squadron moved to the Western Desert, where it began to fly a mix of ground attack and bomber escort missions. The squadron also took part in the Allied invasion of Vichy occupied Syria in the summer of 1941. The Hurricanes were replaced with Kittyhawks in February 1942, and the Mustang in April 1944, and both of these aircraft were used in the fighter bomber role.

The squadron took part in the defeat at Gazala, and advanced with the army from El Alamein into Tunisia. It moved onto Sicily soon after the Allied landings, then onto Italy, where it was used to support the army. In April 1944 the Mustangs arrived, and the squadron's area of operations expanded to include Italy and Yugoslavia. This later duty involving flying the squadron's single engined aircraft over one hundred miles of open sea twice during each mission. The squadron was disbanded on 19 August 1945.

Aircraft
November 1940-February 1942: Hawker Hurricane I
February 1942-May 1943: Curtiss Kittyhawk I and II
December 1942-April 1944: Curtiss Kittyhawk III
April 1944-August 1945: North American Mustang III
June-August 1945: North American Mustang IV

Location
November-December 1940: Castletown
December 1940-January 1941: Skitten
January-February 1941: Castletown
February-April 1941: Skitten
April-May 1941: Drem

August-October 1941: Haifa
October-November 1941: LG.115
November 1941: LG.109
November-December 1941: LG.124
December 1941: Sidi Rezegh
December 1941: Gazala 2
December 1941-January 1942: Msus
January 1942: Antelat
January-February 1942: Benina
February 1942: LG.101
February-March 1942: LG.115
March-May 1942: Gasr el Arid
May-June 1942: Gambut 2
June 1942: Bir el Baheira
June 1942: LG.76
June-July 1942: LG.115 and LG.85
July-November 1942: LG.97
November 1942: LG.75
November 1942: Sidi Azeiz
November 1942: Gambut Main
November 1942: Gazala
November-December 1942: Martuba 4
December 1942: Belandah
December 1942: Marble Arch
December 1942-January 1943: Gzina
January 1943: Hamraiet 1
January 1943: Hamraiet 3
January 1943: Bir Dufan
January 1943: Sedada
January 1943: Bir Dufan
January-February 1943: Castel Benito
February 1943: Sorman
February-March 1943: El Assa
March 1943: Ben Gardane
March 1943: Nefatia
March-April 1943: Medenine Main
April 1943: El Hamma
April 1943: El Djem
April-May 1943: Kairouan
May-July 1943: Zuara
July 1943: Luqa
July-August 1943: Pachino
August-September 1943: Agnone
September-October 1943: Bari
October 1943: Foggia Main
October 1943-January 1944: Mileni
January-May 1944: Cutella
May-June 1944: San Angelo
June 1944: Guidonia
June-July 1944: Falerium
July-August 1944: Crete
August-November 1944: Iesi
November 1944-February 1944: Fano
February-May 1945: Cervia
May-August 1945: Lavariano

Squadron Codes: J, HS

Duty
1940-1941: Home based fighter squadron
1941-1943: Fighter/ fighter-bomber squadron North Africa
1943-1945: Fighter-bomber squadron, Italy and Balkans

Part of
11 November 1941: No.262 Wing; AHQ Western Desert; Middle East Command
27 October 1942: No.233 Wing; No.211 Group; AHQ Western Desert; RAF Middle East
10 July 1943: No.239 Wing; Desert Air Force; North African Tactical Air Force; Northwest African Air Forces; Mediterranean Air Command
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Last edited by Hanno Spoelstra; 17-05-12 at 20:05. Reason: Use Quote button and list source please
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  #12  
Old 17-05-12, 20:02
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Hanno Spoelstra Hanno Spoelstra is offline
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Museum hoping to secure WW2 plane

http://www.barnet-today.co.uk/news.c...%20WW2%20plane
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  #13  
Old 25-05-12, 07:50
SteveF SteveF is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Keith Webb View Post
According to Vintage Wings, this was a Canadian 260 Sqn aircraft. Read the story here.
There seems to be some misunderstanding since 260 Squadron was a RAF unit, not RCAF.... Lots of people all over the internet talking about the Canadian plane found in the desert but if the plane did belong to 260 Squadron then it's British and not Canadian. As far as I know Canadian squadrons were (still are) numbered in the 400's. The article talks about a Canadian pilot who apparently flew in a RAF squadron. Or am I the one who doesn't understand?
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  #14  
Old 25-05-12, 20:30
Alex Blair (RIP) Alex Blair (RIP) is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SteveF View Post
There seems to be some misunderstanding since 260 Squadron was a RAF unit, not RCAF.... Lots of people all over the internet talking about the Canadian plane found in the desert but if the plane did belong to 260 Squadron then it's British and not Canadian. As far as I know Canadian squadrons were (still are) numbered in the 400's. The article talks about a Canadian pilot who apparently flew in a RAF squadron. Or am I the one who doesn't understand?
sTEVE..
Right on..
I was going to make that correction when it was posted originally..

Ex RCAF guy..
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  #16  
Old 15-02-16, 00:40
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What a pitty, a friend of mine has a big construction company in Egypt. Would have loved to salvage that.
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  #18  
Old 05-01-18, 02:37
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Keith Webb Keith Webb is offline
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Default P40

I bet they were proud of their efforts.

In reality it has reduced it's historic value beyond imagination.
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42 FGT No8 (Aust) remains
42 FGT No9 (Aust)
42 F15
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