daveymac82c wrote:
Hey Bill,
Thanks for the link. As it turns out a lot of the info on KB999 is inaccurate. It actually crashed about 70 miles west of the shores of Hudson Bay in an un-named lake. Technically it's located in the southern part of Nunavut.
I spoke with the heritage minister for Nunavut and he was aware of the airplane and has an associate that knows of its exact location, but never mentioned the condition.
I kept digging and eventually learned that the salvage rights belonged to the Western Canada Aviation Museum. The did a survey of the crash location a number of years ago and determined that due to the condition of the airframe (or what was left of it), that any sort of recovery expedition would be too costly for what reminents they would actually be able to being back.
It's quite a sad end to an airplane that didn't look to be too badly damaged after the accident.
So that was about 8 months of searching, calling government offices, military offices, trying to get crash reports from the national archives, etc...
Cheers,
David
I don't get it.... it was fairly intact in the lake, what would have caused it to become so badly damaged that it wouldn't be usable?
The ice wouldn't have done it, at worst it would have crushed the fuselage, but that's assuming there's nothing but air in there. You only have to look at the Dyke Lake B17 to see ice damage; or failing that the Greenland B17's under a couple of hundred feet.
For a Lanc in similar conditions There's the remains of DV202 in the lake near Peenemunde, and I've seen pictures of it iced over.
Are the Western Canada Aviation Museum the same organisation that have the salvage rights for the Avro York?
Regards
Ric