More details of both incidents in US before delivery
Valley Morning Star Thursday, October 04, 1951
Plane Crashes FORT WORTH A Hellcat fighter recently purchased by the Uruguayan government. crashed at the north end of Meacham field Wednesday. The Uruguayan navy pilot and only occupant of the single-engine Americo Noble. 27. suffered cuts and bruises and a possible neck injury.
Albuquerque Journal from Albuquerque, New Mexico · Page 1 Thursday, October 4, 1951
Pilot Has Fortunate Escape in Texas Crash FORT WORTH, Tex- Oct. 3 (JP) A Uruguayan pilot. Americo Noble 26. escaped with minor face cuts today when a Grumman fighter plane he was flying crashed on landing here. The pilot, from Montevideo, radioed for emergency landing clearance shortly before he struck a utility line near the north end of Meacham Field, then glided to a crash landing on the airfield. The aircraft was one of several being reconditioned here for transfer to the Uruguayan military establishment. The pilots on the procurement - mission have -been flying the F6F Hellcats on check flights for several days
Also
Navy Plane Hits Texas Power Line, Crashes Fort Worth Tex. Uruguayan navy fighter plane hit a 'power line at the north end of Meacham Field about p.m. (CST) yesterday. The pilot, the only man aboard the plane, was injured. The plane was coming in for a landing when it struck a power line and crashed. It did not burn.
Denton Record Chronicle Newspaper Archives February 29, 1952 Page 1
Pilot Unhurt As Plane Crashes In Lake Dallas
A Uruguayan Navy pilot escaped unhurt from his crashed plane in Lake Dallas about 5:30 p.m. yesterday as the craft sank in 30 feet of water. The Denton County sheriff’s office reported the pilot gave his name as Ensign Americo Noble of the Uruguay Navy. “My motor was acting up and I knew I was going to have to make a forced landing,” Noble told witnesses. “I saw a boat below and landed as close to it as possible.” He was picked up by J. D. Padgett of Dallas, in a large cabin cruiser. The plane crashed near the middle of the lake, about 200 yards from the Hundley Boatworks. Owner Rib Hundley said he heard the engine conking out as the plane I approached the lake area, and ordered two of his boats to stand by “The canopy flew open as the plane hit the water,” Hundley said. “The pilot got out immediately and clambered around to the tail section, where he was rescued by Padgett. Before the plane sank, Hundley and his crew tied three lines around the tail assembly. Rubber buoys attached to the loose end of the lines thus marked the spot where the plane sank. Rough water and lack of instructions from an insurance company today hampered salvage operations on the sunken plane. The plane was a modified Grumann Hellcat belonging to an Uruguyan naval mission in Fort Worth. Hundley theorized that the plane ran out of gas. “There was no gasoline floating on the water after the craft sank,” Hundley pointed out. “Oil came to the surface, however.” The Lake Dallas resident explained that excessive amounts of gasoline usually float on the surface of the water after such crashes. “The pilot couldn’t have had much gas in the tanks,” Handley reasoned. Destination of the plane was not immediately learned, investigating officers reported. The accident was investigated by Sheriff’s Deputies Roy C. Baker and W. A. Kelly and City Policeman Andy Anderson.
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