eze240 wrote:
Being that crashed planes are not unlike ship wrecks.....It would not surprise me if there is actually little left of the Corsair....
Of course the legend tends to claim it is pretty well complete, etc......in a few more years it will probably be believed to have guns,ammo and a load of spanish gold bars on board......
They don't even have to be underwater. I was once chatting with another visitor at the Yankee Air Museum who claimed that when the Lancaster was first put on a pole over in Windsor they forgot to remove the guns, and by the time someone remembered they had all been stolen. I tried to politely tell him that all the armament had been removed many years earlier when she was reconfigured for SAR duties, but he wouldn't hear of it..his story was much cooler! He also claimed that parts for WWII warbirds are easy to get, because the military still has thousands of them sitting in mothballs out in the desert or on islands in the Pacific. In fact I still regularly run across people who are convinced that there are masses of WWII aircraft just quietly sitting desert storage. Of course the average person can't tell a B-17 from a C-130. It's not that they're stupid, it's just not a subject in which they have any knowledge or interest. I'm an airplane

, but I personally doubt I could tell the difference between weaponry from the American Revolution and the Civil War (separated by nearly a century.)
Back to the original topic, a guy in our model club was telling me once about a collector in Indiana (not Dean Kruse) who had a bunch of WWII military vehicles, and a largely complete Japanese Zero. The collector was supposedly very private, but had once showed my friend and his buddies around the treasure trove (sometime in the 80s as I recall.) He claimed to have gotten inside the Zeke, and I think he's knowledgeable enough to tell if it was just some old T-6 or the real thing.
SN