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PostPosted: Sun Sep 17, 2006 3:58 pm 
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Who owns the LB-30 and what are their future plans for it?

I visited the Australian B-24 project today and their storage facility, they have many B-24 spares, tail, wing and fuselage sections that would appear to be able to fill in many of the gaps of this LB-30, and a workshop/restoration crew already skilled in the type.

Have the owners considered contracting the fuselage etc to a group like this to reconstruct it, using their skills, spare parts, jigs etc?

It seems a shame to have it rotting away like it is -surely there is a plan to do something with it?

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 17, 2006 7:46 pm 
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To follow Mark's lead...

Why not talk to the folks in Australia, get their collection, plus Kaleeta's parts, plus this LB-30 to make 2 fliers? Again, I have a hunch that everyone's answer is going to be "with enough money, sure, it's possible!"

kevin


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PostPosted: Mon Sep 18, 2006 4:30 am 
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If the third digit is an 8, then just maybe those are the outer wings of this Bolivian B-17 (again, from Baugher):

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44-6332 CB-88-->CP-588 Destroyed May 1963.


Paging aerovin!! There's been some confusion over this plane's ID - you said it may be actually 42-5332 - maybe it can be verified now?

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 21, 2006 8:44 am 
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Those do look like B-17 outer wing panels, but I'm going to compare some other photos for the access panels, etc. It would appear that the furthest is a right panel and the nearest a left. Whittington did recover the B-17E from Bolivia and I heard he got some other parts too, so it is quite possible those are from CP-588. I'm not sure if any internal parts tags would help verify the identity as many time those tags are parts numbers with no relation to the aircraft's msn. It certainly bears further investigation.


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PostPosted: Sun Sep 24, 2006 9:57 am 
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Mark_Pilkington wrote:
Who owns the LB-30 and what are their future plans for it?

I visited the Australian B-24 project today and their storage facility, they have many B-24 spares, tail, wing and fuselage sections that would appear to be able to fill in many of the gaps of this LB-30, and a workshop/restoration crew already skilled in the type.

Have the owners considered contracting the fuselage etc to a group like this to reconstruct it, using their skills, spare parts, jigs etc?

It seems a shame to have it rotting away like it is -surely there is a plan to do something with it?

regards

Mark Pilkington


Mark,

could you point the way towards a website or photo's of the Autralian B-24 ? I'm curious, and I must confess naive to the idea that any surviving -24's were outside the US with the exception of India.

Thanks in advance,

Paul


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PostPosted: Sun Sep 24, 2006 10:03 am 
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The owners(s) of the LB-30 here in CO are the Whittington brothers of Florida....and as far as I know, several people have tried to purchase it from them with no success....they are both hard to reach (from what I've been told) and reluctant to part with it....but I know no more than that.

Would be nice to see something done with the LIb besides watch it rot away beside a hangar.

M

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 24, 2006 11:17 am 
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A thought of making the LB-30 again take to the air...........would be be possible to make it a B-24 with a bomb bay???

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 24, 2006 12:56 pm 
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Paul, Here's a website for the bunch in Australia.

http://www.b24australia.com/

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 24, 2006 1:37 pm 
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I'm curious, and I must confess naive to the idea that any surviving -24's were outside the US with the exception of India.


There's two in England plus one in Canada.


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PostPosted: Sun Sep 24, 2006 2:12 pm 
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Dan Jones wrote:
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I'm curious, and I must confess naive to the idea that any surviving -24's were outside the US with the exception of India.


There's two in England plus one in Canada.


OK, I have a question. A year + ago there was talk of a B-24 recovery in Canada that got stuck on the dock (I guess the recover was a while ago). Is there truth to that story and if so anyone know anything? If its a "tall Tale"?

Tim

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 24, 2006 10:06 pm 
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Tim - Tom Reilly recovered a crashed B-24, Canadian AF #586, but was stopped from transporting it out of Labrador, I believe. This was probably about 15 years ago. I never understood why they would not let him export it, as he seemed to have done all the necessary and proper steps. There was an article, and pictures, in US AVIATOR, January 1992 issue. I hope someone can tell us what ever became of the Lib, and maybe why it was stopped at the docks.


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PostPosted: Tue Feb 20, 2007 11:19 am 
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This one particular wreck might be crucial in strengthening the very few flyable Libs out there.


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