Iclo wrote:
As the first attempt with the 2 loaders was definitly a huge mistake for all people who one time operate to refloat a ship, the second attempt is probably more debatable
I seriously doubt a naval recovery company could have the knowledge on "how to lift a Catalina", they probably did their best and how their looks to have done it will probably worked fine with a sailboat or motorboat.
I wonder if a real specialist in this kind of sailplane was involved directly in the operation. If yes, he probably desserves the majority of criticism.
Resolve Marine were a contractor brought in by Atlanta Aircraft Salvage, who was hired for the recovery operation. AAS contacted at least 1 PBY operator for the lifting diagrams. This is why so many are being critical of the operation. It was being carried out by a marine salvage company, but they were doing it on contract to an aircraft recovery firm that should have been in overall control of the operation.
Chuck -1) From everything I've seen, water most likely did not enter the aircraft in any significant amounts once the initial flooding issue was solved. We don't even know how much water got in initially or how far it got into the plane if it even got past the initial bulkheads. Those windows are designed to take surf and are mostly water tight. Additionally, they had pumps running onboard at least during filming times so how much stayed in the plane for any amount of time is debatable as well. The fact it was floating the day before the hoist with no visible pumps suggests that the plane was watertight.
2) The photos are pretty clear that there were no other lifting devices attached except the slings.
I give the benefit of the doubt to Resolve. They were operating at the direction of Atlanta Aircraft Salvage. I don't give any benefit to AAS as they knew better. The other question I have is how much did this really affect the filming? Cost of the aircraft aside, the statements from the production company during the 4 days before the lift indicated they had plans of doing a lot more filming of the plane, including mentions of more filming after it was taken out of the water, so this throws their plans way out of whack and possibly will cost them a lot more money to keep their planned sequences if they have to come up with alternate shooting plans (other PBYs, CGI, green screen, etc) which means more cost and thus the issue is more than just replacing a plane.