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FW-190 Found in Russia.

Thu Jan 22, 2009 5:40 pm

"YOU TUBE" posted today a clip showing a Luftwaffe FW-190 that crashed-landed in a forrest near St. Petersburg.
Some people are questioning how well preserved it looks.
Take a look at it.

Thu Jan 22, 2009 5:44 pm

Some time ago I post this on my forum:

http://www.letletlet-warplanes.com/foru ... opic=846.0

Is this what you talk about?

Thu Jan 22, 2009 5:44 pm

SOOOOORRY ! !
It´s on LIVELEAK.com.

Thu Jan 22, 2009 5:47 pm

Yea, it´s the same.

Thu Jan 22, 2009 5:47 pm

This one! Looks too good to be true, but too good to be fake!!! :shock: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=jueDXiuU6aM

Thu Jan 22, 2009 6:04 pm

Isn't that the one they found in the '90s?

fw

Thu Jan 22, 2009 6:10 pm

same plane found int he 90s,almost restored to flying condition currently...

Thu Jan 22, 2009 6:23 pm

That's Paul Allen's airplane. It was being restored at JME in England, I believe its at Gosshawk for final restoration.

190

Thu Jan 22, 2009 6:28 pm

Django wrote:Isn't that the one they found in the '90s?
Doug Arnold got this out in the early 90s.I think his son has it now or did.This bird was beautiful.

Thu Jan 22, 2009 6:47 pm

This is from another fourm.

"JME Aviation is restoring the collection's Fw 190 as well as its Me 262. Fw 190s were the best of the Axis propeller fighters, and are rare today; about two dozen airframes, or portions of them, are known. No flying example of reasonable authenticity exists.

The collection's Fw 190 came from Russia, where it had lain for decades, upright and relatively undamaged, in a remote forest east of Leningrad (St. Petersburg today). What was an airplane doing deep in a forest? The answer, deduced from the damage to the leading edges of the wings, was that it had crashed among poplar saplings only a few feet tall. The forest had grown up around it.

Flash back to July 19, 1943. Two Fw 190s were attacking a Russian supply train bound for Leningrad when the engine of one quit. The pilot, Sergeant Paul Rätz, glided to a safe landing. He left his flying cap on the seat but took the airplane's panel clock with him. Trying to make his way back to German lines, he was captured a few miles away and remained imprisoned in Russia for 16 years before finally returning to Germany. In 1988, a collector found the Focke-Wulf where Rätz had left it, his helmet still resting on the seat. Rätz died in 1989, never having learned that his airplane had been recovered. But his family did—and, it turns out, they still have the clock.

A Vintage Wings technician dismantling the 190's BMW 801 engine found a clod of dirt in an oil line downstream from the oil filter. This had evidently been the reason for the forced landing: Lack of lubrication had caused an internal shaft to overheat and fail, disabling the fuel and oil pumps. But how had the dirt—not engine dirt, but soil, earth—gotten there? Says Jeff Thomas, "BMW's policy on major engine maintenance was to insist that the whole 'power egg'—the engine and all of its plumbing and equipment and mounting hardware—just be taken off and sent back to the factory rather than repaired in the field." As a result, all engine assembly was done in Germany, some of it by slave laborers. The theory is that one of those laborers had packed dirt into the oil line to sabotage the engine, the engine had then been shipped to Russia and installed on the airplane at the front, and within a few minutes after takeoff the defiant act of the distant and anonymous captive had done its work."
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