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Very interesting!
Sarcastically speaking.... It looks like it just needs a dust off and an oil change and it'll be good as new.
On a more serious note, there are so many videos of aircraft wrecks underwater all over the world. What are all the reasons for not recovering them? One day they will be gone and it would be a shame to have them waste away.
I'm interested to hear peoples knowledge on possible reasons why planes like this one haven't been recovered yet.
It's a tourist attraction, it's a reef (habitat), it's a monument, it's expensive to remove, it's not worth it? All possible reasons... anything else?
Obviously, this one is somewhat of a tourist attraction with scuba tours going to see it, but when you're in a tropical paradise with tons of coral reefs and beautiful beaches, does diving on a WWII plane wreck make the trip that much more exciting to the average person. I myself, would be very excited to dive on the plane, but do you think the average person would really remember it and appreciate it as much as you and me?
Wouldn't the airplane be better preserved on the land, so that all non-snorkel wearing people could appreciate it? On the land there could be proper signage for people to understand the significance of the airplane, etc, etc, instead of having a diving instructor tell you "what he heard" about the wreck.
Sure, an airplane like this could be brought up, and have extensive work done to it to make it flyable. A ridiculous amount of money it would take to do, but it's possible. Static display easier, and an "As is" display even easier.
My opinion is that it should be recovered and placed in a building/museum for preservation in Indonesia. This way more people would be able to see it at it will remain a local attraction.
As for restoration, I don't know enough about it's actual condition to understand the feasability of doing so, but I know from experience that anything is possible. For instance the Handley Page Hampden that my museum pulled out of the ocean in the 80's as a crumpled heap of metal, now sits on it's undercarriage and looks fantastic after years of dedicated work.
Let's hear what you all think.
Cheers,
David
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