WWII surplus

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Eraser
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WWII surplus

Post by Eraser »

When World War II drew to a close in 1945, the Allies had a massive surplus of military vehicles on their hands. The United States alone had manufactured approximately 294,000 aircraft for the war.

Many of the aircraft that survived the war were not worth the expense of transportation back to the States, and were dumped or destroyed in their theatre of operation.
[lvlshot]http://1.mshcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/ ... plus-3.jpg[/lvlshot]

[lvlshot]http://1.mshcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/ ... lus-11.jpg[/lvlshot]

many more pictures: http://mashable.com/2015/08/15/wwii-surplus-vehicles/
LawL
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Re: WWII surplus

Post by LawL »

Gr8.
Thick, solid and tight in all the right places.
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Whiskey 7
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Re: WWII surplus

Post by Whiskey 7 »

Interesting Eraser :up:

That second pic has mainly B52 Stratofortress aircraft in a 'bone yard'.

Months ago I got a DVD out of our local library on the same subject, an Australian Made Release DVD of ' Bone Yard '.

Interesting because, even though they are there in the dumping yard being too expensive to recycle, some are stripped for parts even today. Amazingly some are restored and fly again.
Australian Jeff Watson takes a 44 minute journey through the Bone Yard. The Davis Monthan air force base in Tucson Arizona is the home of AMARG the 309th Aerospace maintenance and Regenaration Group commonly known as The BoneYard. Basking in the dry Arizona sun are 4,400 aircraft ranging from the enormous C 5a Galaxy to fast jets like the F-15 Eagle, F14 Tomcat and F-16 Fighting Falcon. The US Government have been storing planes here since 1946. Back then the facillity stored excess WW2 fighter, transport and bomber aircraft. Iconic planes like the DC3 or B29, some of these older examples can still be seen lying in the desert. Most of the aircraft that end their days at Davis Mothan will never fly again but around 20% are actually put back into service.
This a trailer but being made in Australia, chances are you won't ever get hold of it :smirk:

[youtube]U1bXBEcgKkY[/youtube]
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phantasmagoria
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Re: WWII surplus

Post by phantasmagoria »

Nice link, thanks :up:

It's the post-Vietnam footage that astounds me, where they're pushing Huey's off Aircraft carriers straight into the sea.
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phantasmagoria
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Re: WWII surplus

Post by phantasmagoria »

This mashable website is great, actually:

http://mashable.com/2015/08/10/hair-dry ... cid=lf-toc

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Eraser
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Re: WWII surplus

Post by Eraser »

Wtf is this?
[lvlshot]http://1.mshcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/hairdryers-16.jpg[/lvlshot]
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Whiskey 7
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Re: WWII surplus

Post by Whiskey 7 »

phantasmagoria wrote:Nice link, thanks :up:

It's the post-Vietnam footage that astounds me, where they're pushing Huey's off Aircraft carriers straight into the sea.
With the collapse of South Vietnam, numerous boats and ships, VNAF helicopters and some fixed-wing aircraft sailed or flew out to the evacuation fleet. Helicopters began to clog ship decks and eventually, some were pushed overboard to allow others to land. Pilots of other helicopters were told to drop off their passengers and then take off and ditch in the sea, from where they would be rescued.
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seremtan
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Re: WWII surplus

Post by seremtan »

Memphis wrote:[lvlshot]http://1.mshcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/hairdryers-10.jpg[/lvlshot]

The Matrix, circa 1930.
cappucino?
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