A26 Special K wrote:
just curious as to how the AF handled the wreckage after something like this happened? Was it just buried or what? Thanks, JR
While I was at Hurlburt Field in '68 we had a C-123 and an A-1 "crash land". Both of these were caused by obvious trainee pilot error and damaged beyond economical repair. So, they were drug off the runway and stripped for any usable stuff. Then, their hulks were drug out to the boonies and left there hidden by the Florida jungle. I only discovered their hiding place by riding my dirt bike motorcycle from town and ended up on base... no gates or fences to stop me. I discovered both A/C were just sitting in the dirt of a clearing. That was in Nov. '68.
I returned a couple of years ago to try to see if the A/C were still sitting in the jungle. Some of the area that used to be jungle is now the "East Side" of the expanded base with a parking ramp and maintenance buildings for the CV-22 Osprey, a new commissary and a host of other stuff for the 1st SOW. There's still lots of jungle too, and I think the area where the crashed A/C were stashed may still be undisturbed. However, the jungle is even thicker. When I tried to find the old A/C I had to try to walk into the jungle since it was very overgrown. But I was attacked by mosquitoes and every insect Florida has to offer. With the massive defense of the jungle offered up by the squadrons of defenders I had to abandon my quest to find the A/C. So... those A/C may or may not still be there.
While at NKP we had a couple of airplanes (A-26 and A-1) crash at the base. The A-26, #673, cartwheeled into the "end of runway" area in March '69 while still loaded with bombs. The A-26 still had a full load of fuel too and immediately burst into flames. It was on a declared emergency so the fire department was right there to put the fire out. To my amazement... and my survival... nothing exploded. (Neither of the pilots got out.)
An A-1 ran off the end of runway while on take-off... with a full bomb load in late Oct 1969. The ordinance "cooked off" all night long. Bullets "firing" randomly and bombs exploding every ten or fifteen minutes for what seemed like hours. The pilot made it out... the Yankee ejection seat should have been fitted to the A-26.
Anyway... following both crashes, the carcasses of the A/C were taken to a hanger to see if "investigators" could find out what went wrong. In both cases the official "story" that came out were in my opinion "bogus". After the "investigations" the wreckage disappeared from the hangar. I suspect that the Thais welcomed the scrap metal... they were always scarfing up on the stuff we left behind.