B-29 Super Fort wrote:
I wonder how far apart the planes were after they landed in Greenland?
If you look at
This Picture from the Lost Squadron Web Site it should give you a general idea.
brucev wrote:
the story is sorely lacking in detail, how do they plan #1 to locate the aircraft again, (they surely have moved since 1992) and #2 to remove enough ice to bring the aircraft up?
If you look at
This Set of Pictures from the Lost Squadron Web Site, they show some pics of the Super Gopher they used to tunnel down. They then used pressure washers to carve out a cavern and took the plane apart and brought her up piece by piece... the largest being the centre section. The old Glacier Girl web site is long gone, but if IIRC... the plane’s locations were tagged somehow so if they move with the glacier, they could still be located.
I’ve been keen on this story since Glacier Girl, but
The Lost Squadron Web Site has no updates since 2009 so I’m not sure what’s going on with them.
From the article... “Glacier Girl, the P-38 recovered in 1992 and restored, came with a cost of some $3 million. Glacier Girl, airborne once again, sold for $7 million.”
IIRC the old Glacier Girl web site’s FAQ said restoration was approx. $10 million. It sold for a heck of a lot more than $7 million did it not?
Brucey is right, the story is lacking in a lot of detail. You can’t just fly this AN-2 up there and start drilling. Something’s missing here.