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With dry cells/batteries and radios removed from the aircraft and remains of them sitting adjacent to the wreck I do wonder if the pilot tried to contact base by rigging them up outside?
regards
Mark Pilkington
If this was the case, which it is looking more like it, I'm sure we can all imagine the grim reality this poor fellow must have faced before deciding to marching off into sandy oblivion. With an impact such as this I would be surprised if the pilot wasn't injured or at the very least very very sore. Less and Less am I seeing a revered WW2 fighter as I do a chilling momument to a pilot's last living moments on earth.
If this is F/Sgt Copping's Kittyhawk then this might shed some light onto the circumstances leading up to his last flight (excerpt from "Kittyhawk Pilot"):
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In the meantime, Axis ground forces had been advancing rapidly. By nightfall panic poured through the base of 233 Wing. Twenty-one Panzer Division was on the escarpment in control of Fuka landing grounds only seventeen miles from LG-09. A large concentration of vehicles was already preparing for the night only miles short of that base.
"The order was given to evacuate immediately,” Eddie wrote. "All serviceable aircraft were flown off by the light of a few drums set on fire. They landed under similar conditions at LG-106.” The Kittyhawks landed at their new base about thirty miles east of LG-09 in the dark. It was about nine o'clock and the day had been long for most, but not long enough for F/Sgt Copping. He didn't make it over the ground convoys who fumbled their way to LG-106 in the dark, pushing their trucks through the heavy sand
Question: Is the holster looking device on the starboard side of the pilot's seat for a flare gun? If so I imagine he would have taken that with him.
Shay
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Semper Fortis