Wildchild wrote:
That engine's probly totaled.
Ya reckon?
Shay wrote:
Forgive my ignorance, what is the UK's equivlant to JPAC? Could this be them?
There is no UK equivalent. There is a mix of military and other extempore managers of situations that arise, but there's no one official that goes looking. Probably at base because the UK has been fighting everywhere for longer than most other nations trying to 'bring the boys back home'. There are a number of unofficial people and organisations who do mostly very good work. There are posters from the UK here who have more intimate involvement than I with that kind of work. They may add to, or correct my comments.
george wrote:
In the original 5 photos, photo 2 showed the rear fuselage section still straight and not touching the ground, although 70 years with a cracked back. Some have speculated a wheels down landing, but in that same photo the tail wheel is retracted. Those photos seem to no longer be available at the original site. The newest photos show the tail wheel down, and the rear fuselage now on the ground.
You can see copies I snagged (with credit) on my blog here. I think the originals have vanished due to a bandwidth blowout; nothing more suspicious.
http://vintageaeroplanewriter.blogspot. ... yhawk.htmlmustanglover wrote:
I am no expert in deserts and how the wear and tear from everyday sandblasting, but why would the upper sides of this airplane not be sandblasted, yet the wings and lower fuselage is very well sandblasted?
Because there's an inverse variation of how much sandblasting occurs as you go up in height from the ground - most winds move a
little sand at
low levels
often, but the winds required to lift more sand higher are rarer, so over time, have less effect. Even on something as low and small as a Kittyhawk. On a bigger scale, that's why mushroom rock formations develop.
And as Peter says;
PeterA wrote:
Deserts behave differently. These dunes further south in Namibia are over a 1000' high...and they move over time.
These are Barchan Dunes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BarchanRegards,