bcmj wrote:
I finished the story of the B24 in Huntington Lake, printed in the Sept 1976 issue of Air Classics. Here's the highlights form the article. The B24 took off from hammer field, about a 100 miles northeast of Fresno the bomber suffered complete hydraulic failure, 15 minutes later the crew became hopeless lost in a blinding snow storm as the B24 headed southward.The crew was unable to see out the windows because of heavy snow, the pilot instructed the flight engineer to crank open the bomb bay doors so they could look straight down, as they circle the lake the copilot and radio operator bailed out. From their it's not know exactly what happen but the bomber landed/crash in the frozen lake, broke into 3 pcs and broke threw the ice and sank.The story goes on to question why they went for a wheels up landing with the bomb bay doors open and really questioned why the copilot and radio operator bail out first? After reading it I have more questions then before I started. I will try to scan it and paste it here. Their a lot more in the article then I want to type, sorry.
Barry
I have the accident report here.
There is a detailed summary of this accident in Volume Two (page 608) of
FATAL ARMY AIR FORCES AVIATION ACCIDENTS
IN THE UNITED STATES, 1941-1945
According to the AAF Accident Report:
"Immediately after peeling off, the number two propeller governor failed and the engine had to be throttled back. Immediately afterward the aircraft began to lose altitude rapidly, the reason which is undetermined. ... Despite the fact that the co-pilot parachuted to safety, no cause for the accident has been determined. He [the co-pilot] states that he can remember no cause for the [diminished] performance of the airplane."
Tony M.