A few more WW2 era plane wrecks and I promise no more after this. Back to more conventional explores when the weather warms up a bit.
Five wrecks all in mid-Wales done over two trips in May - one of those trips being in mid-winter like conditions:
1. AVRO LANCASTER B. Mk.I W4326, DOLWEN HILL NEAR LLANGADFLAN
Belonging to No.101 Sqn RAF, it took off from RAF Holme-on-Spalding Moor in East Yorkshire on the 16th November 1942 for a night cross-country bombing and photographic exercise, the intended ‘target’ was St Tudwal’s in Gwynedd. A bright flash in the sky was observed and the aircraft then dived into moorland. On investigation there was evidence that a photoflash had detonated in the release chute, the explosion resulted in the tail section of the aircraft detaching from the fuselage. 7 crew members were killed. A considerable amount of airframe wreckage, including several sizeable sections from the engine nacelles, can be seen at the site where a large boggy hollow remains. The site was excavated in 1988 and two of the Rolls-Royce Merlin engines recovered.
The Avro Lancaster is a four-engined heavy bomber, designed by Roy Chadwick and powered by Rolls-Royce Merlin engines. It first saw service with RAF Bomber Command in 1942. Primarly a night bomber it was used in the infamous Dambuster raids. 17 largely intact Lancasters remain of which 2 are airworthy.
The largest pile of wreckage seen from a distance
A second pile lies a short distance away
2. LOCKHEED F-5E LIGHTNING 44-24229, PLYNLIMON NEAR ABERYSTWYTH
Whilst on a ferry flight from Chalgrove Air Station in Oxfordshire to Base Air Depot 1 at Burtonwood near Warrington on the 11th September 1945, the aircraft hit the mountain. The following day a shepherd sighted the wreckage and reported it to the police. When investigators surveyed the scene it was discovered that the aircraft had clipped the slope below the top of a nearby ridge while descending at high speed, shedding the propellers, and then flew on for some distance before impacting inverted. Based on this, the investigators concluded that the pilot had lost control while flying on instruments, after entering cloud, and was recovering from a dive when the aircraft struck the ground. Substantial remains including wing, tail boom and tail-plane sections were recovered in the late 1970s, while one of the Allison engines was recovered in the 1980s. Several sizeable sections of the aircraft still remain including the forward section of the port tail boom with the inboard section of the port wing still attached. The turbocharger of the port engine was cut of the wreckage, unlawfully, circa 2002/3.
The Lockheed F-5E was a photo reconnaisance variant of the Lockheed P-38 Lightning - an American fighter aircraft. It had distinctive twin booms and a central nacelle containing the cockpit. It was noted for being unusually quiet since the exhaust was muffled by turbo-superchargers.
The site seen from a distance
And close-up. the obvious circular hole is where the port turbocharger was relatively recently cut out
Assumed to be the exhaust
A trail of wreckage down the slope
The lowermost piece
Five wrecks all in mid-Wales done over two trips in May - one of those trips being in mid-winter like conditions:
1. AVRO LANCASTER B. Mk.I W4326, DOLWEN HILL NEAR LLANGADFLAN
Belonging to No.101 Sqn RAF, it took off from RAF Holme-on-Spalding Moor in East Yorkshire on the 16th November 1942 for a night cross-country bombing and photographic exercise, the intended ‘target’ was St Tudwal’s in Gwynedd. A bright flash in the sky was observed and the aircraft then dived into moorland. On investigation there was evidence that a photoflash had detonated in the release chute, the explosion resulted in the tail section of the aircraft detaching from the fuselage. 7 crew members were killed. A considerable amount of airframe wreckage, including several sizeable sections from the engine nacelles, can be seen at the site where a large boggy hollow remains. The site was excavated in 1988 and two of the Rolls-Royce Merlin engines recovered.
The Avro Lancaster is a four-engined heavy bomber, designed by Roy Chadwick and powered by Rolls-Royce Merlin engines. It first saw service with RAF Bomber Command in 1942. Primarly a night bomber it was used in the infamous Dambuster raids. 17 largely intact Lancasters remain of which 2 are airworthy.
The largest pile of wreckage seen from a distance
A second pile lies a short distance away
2. LOCKHEED F-5E LIGHTNING 44-24229, PLYNLIMON NEAR ABERYSTWYTH
Whilst on a ferry flight from Chalgrove Air Station in Oxfordshire to Base Air Depot 1 at Burtonwood near Warrington on the 11th September 1945, the aircraft hit the mountain. The following day a shepherd sighted the wreckage and reported it to the police. When investigators surveyed the scene it was discovered that the aircraft had clipped the slope below the top of a nearby ridge while descending at high speed, shedding the propellers, and then flew on for some distance before impacting inverted. Based on this, the investigators concluded that the pilot had lost control while flying on instruments, after entering cloud, and was recovering from a dive when the aircraft struck the ground. Substantial remains including wing, tail boom and tail-plane sections were recovered in the late 1970s, while one of the Allison engines was recovered in the 1980s. Several sizeable sections of the aircraft still remain including the forward section of the port tail boom with the inboard section of the port wing still attached. The turbocharger of the port engine was cut of the wreckage, unlawfully, circa 2002/3.
The Lockheed F-5E was a photo reconnaisance variant of the Lockheed P-38 Lightning - an American fighter aircraft. It had distinctive twin booms and a central nacelle containing the cockpit. It was noted for being unusually quiet since the exhaust was muffled by turbo-superchargers.
The site seen from a distance
And close-up. the obvious circular hole is where the port turbocharger was relatively recently cut out
Assumed to be the exhaust
A trail of wreckage down the slope
The lowermost piece
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