Burmese Spitfires

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Neil Hutchinson
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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby Neil Hutchinson » December 1st, 2012, 9:59 am

Now, if they could find all those crated Mosquitoes in China - that would be a coup!

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Neil
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ian redshaw
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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby ian redshaw » December 1st, 2012, 12:50 pm

Neil Hutchinson wrote:Now, if they could find all those crated Mosquitoes in China - that would be a coup!

TTFN,
Neil


Coup, is that Chinese for compost??

Ian.

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Neil Hutchinson
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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby Neil Hutchinson » December 1st, 2012, 4:52 pm

Redshaw, you hopeless child, Coup means successful action :roll:
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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby Ken Bones » December 1st, 2012, 5:21 pm

Neil Hutchinson wrote:Redshaw, you hopeless child, Coup means successful action :roll:



Woosh! ;)

Bonzey

Vince Raia
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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby Vince Raia » December 2nd, 2012, 1:06 pm

:lol: :lol: :lol: Well with all that hair you can't expect him to have brains under there too :lol:

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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby Bob Thompson1894 » December 2nd, 2012, 1:59 pm

ian redshaw wrote:
Neil Hutchinson wrote:Now, if they could find all those crated Mosquitoes in China - that would be a coup!

TTFN,
Neil


Coup, is that Chinese for compost??

Ian.
Thats where you keep your chickens, Ian....

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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby Ken Bones » December 2nd, 2012, 4:52 pm

Oh dear! I knew what you meant Ian.

Whoosh and whoosh again.

Bonzey

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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby sean smith » December 10th, 2012, 4:20 pm


ian redshaw
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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby ian redshaw » December 10th, 2012, 4:50 pm

Ken Bones wrote:Oh dear! I knew what you meant Ian.

Whoosh and whoosh again.

Bonzey


Cheers for confirming my sanity Ken, right over their heads!!!

Ian.

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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby Paul Holt » January 4th, 2013, 7:18 am

I see on the BBC news this morning an article saying digging starts next week. Should be an interesting few weeks then.

stewart clifford
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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby stewart clifford » January 4th, 2013, 10:37 am

Too late, Chocky got there first, dug them up one night and shifted them back to his unit in Wiltshire.

In this months Flypast mag it has an article on this and the team have a blog which you can follow, I'll put the details of it on here later.

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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby Paul Holt » January 4th, 2013, 5:48 pm

Cheers Stewart, would be good to follow the dig.

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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby stewart clifford » January 4th, 2013, 7:01 pm

it's http://worldofwarplanes.eu

Also in the same edition there's a bit about a wildcat which has just been pulled intact from lake Michigan, they think there's atleast 70 more aircraft in that lake alone. Gives the doubters something to think about, there is so much of this stuff in lakes, forests, caves under the ground as well as no end of airframes in store all over the world. It always makes me laugh when I her the uneducated say "that can't happen".

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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby Paul Holt » January 4th, 2013, 9:54 pm

nice one

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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby david whiston » January 7th, 2013, 5:51 pm

I think this is absolutely fantastic and I think / hope we will all be pleasantly surprised once the aircraft are excavated. I am not an expert at this sort of thing but, I have sort of made a living digging holes all over the world so I have a little experience. My understanding is that the "cases" are burried in what was at the time a dried up river bed which is why they are lying under 36 feet of material. Now the last time we did any digging in that region the "soil" was what we might consider as marl, lots of clay in it . If you have seen the size of the cases and there are photo's of these on the web they are very similar to what we would call an ISO 20ft container the rear door pillars are 6 inch square. Now if you saw the "time team " dig of the WW1 trenches do you recall that the timber uncovered in the "mine" shaft leading to the German lines was in excellent conditon despite being under water since the end of WW1 ??
So my theory is that firstly the cases are more than capable of supporting the weight of the material that is covering them, if the material does have a lot of marl in it then the closer you get down to the cases the more compacted it becomes and the more compacted it is then the less likely water can pass through it , sort of a clay jacket,, the only issue is were the cases placed on similar material before burial to prevent water coming up from the old river base . So water proof could also mean air proof ??? I do not know you guys know much more about spitfires than me , but my hope is that they are sealed ( mummifed ) by the clay, Ok the electrics will most likely be shot, but everything else ??? who knows. The Engine powering the first re pro fe2b built by the Vintage Aviator was I beleive ( I am probably wrong) discovered in a farm yard in Argentina ?? open to the elements,, it seems to be running ok today ...
Anyway I say best of luck to the team in Burma and I truly hope they strike gold

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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby Mike Booth » January 9th, 2013, 12:29 pm

One aspect of this that fascinates me, is that there is just a chance that we will see genuine preserved camouflage and marking from the period.
Something that must be almost unique .
Another thought is that if it is possible to recover artifacts from the Titanic, this dig must be a piece of cake.
I hear digging is underway, so it can't be long before some pictures are made public.

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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby Bob Thompson1894 » January 9th, 2013, 12:58 pm

david whiston wrote:I think this is absolutely fantastic and I think / hope we will all be pleasantly surprised once the aircraft are excavated. I am not an expert at this sort of thing but, I have sort of made a living digging holes all over the world so I have a little experience. My understanding is that the "cases" are burried in what was at the time a dried up river bed which is why they are lying under 36 feet of material. Now the last time we did any digging in that region the "soil" was what we might consider as marl, lots of clay in it . If you have seen the size of the cases and there are photo's of these on the web they are very similar to what we would call an ISO 20ft container the rear door pillars are 6 inch square. Now if you saw the "time team " dig of the WW1 trenches do you recall that the timber uncovered in the "mine" shaft leading to the German lines was in excellent conditon despite being under water since the end of WW1 ??
So my theory is that firstly the cases are more than capable of supporting the weight of the material that is covering them, if the material does have a lot of marl in it then the closer you get down to the cases the more compacted it becomes and the more compacted it is then the less likely water can pass through it , sort of a clay jacket,, the only issue is were the cases placed on similar material before burial to prevent water coming up from the old river base . So water proof could also mean air proof ??? I do not know you guys know much more about spitfires than me , but my hope is that they are sealed ( mummifed ) by the clay, Ok the electrics will most likely be shot, but everything else ??? who knows. The Engine powering the first re pro fe2b built by the Vintage Aviator was I beleive ( I am probably wrong) discovered in a farm yard in Argentina ?? open to the elements,, it seems to be running ok today ...
Anyway I say best of luck to the team in Burma and I truly hope they strike gold

I believe they were laid on teak logs, and have a roof over them made also from teak.

david whiston
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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby david whiston » January 9th, 2013, 4:30 pm

I just read the cooment on the rcmf forum its a BBC report that they have "found a case" and its full of water... BUT this does not match up, the location and number of reported cases is wrong. This report I think refers to the reported earlier mark aircraft that the team said they were also aware of. my previous comments refer to the 36 cased Mark 14 aircraft supposedly at Rangoon international airport. WHICH the guy who has been looking for these aircraft discussed when he was on Breakfast tv, HE ALSO SAID ,,,,, that they had drilled down to one of the cases at Rangoon and a fusalage was clearly visible, he did not say anything about water nor did he say Spitfire fusalage he simply said fusalage. but the numbers now reported do match up with the volumes of aircraft reportedly buried at two diferent sites ...Fun isn't it. I think they are conducting two digs back to back for two diferent Spitfire types at two diferent locations,,,, Any replies please forward to my assistant Dr Watson at 22a Baker street London,,

jimlambert
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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby jimlambert » January 9th, 2013, 11:46 pm

Back in 1976 I was travelling through the highlands .. near Applecross when I spotted a Spitfire lying completely intact lying at the back of a barn with various bushes and assorted undergrowth poking out of it .. I made some enquires with the farmer and he said I could have it for 100 quid ... what a bargain !!... A few of my mates helped me to get it back to Glasgow and after a few months with the cataloy and a bit of knuckle busting I got it fired up and MOT'd I ran it for a while till the overdrive fragged the box into oblivion...... It also ended up at the bottom of a big ditch full of mud ...... Happy New Year ........ Jim

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Re: Burmese Spitfires

Postby Vince Raia » January 11th, 2013, 10:59 am

Now the dig has started, this must be the hottest thread on the forum, I for one am watching it with baited breath!


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