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Which Aerodrome Mk IV
this may assist..........
Right Island - wrong Airport
Not Banda Aceh
The challenge is named after another national hero - but later than the esteemed Sultan
The challenge is named after another national hero - but later than the esteemed Sultan
Closer - both in time (of the patriot) and location - but not Pekanbaru. Here's a navaid to help. It's not a terribly busy spot TBH
That might be the lady who , amongst other things, made the actual flag that was hoisted on 17th August 1945. She was a Benkulu lass................
not too far off 24 hours - Bear has it with Bengkulu
It was due to be upgraded significantly I believe but I haven't heard if they've finished it
Oddly the area remained in the hands of the British for 140 years until as late as 1824 - when it was swapped for Malacca
It was due to be upgraded significantly I believe but I haven't heard if they've finished it
Oddly the area remained in the hands of the British for 140 years until as late as 1824 - when it was swapped for Malacca
Interesting - looks like a big distribution centre
Are those dead fuselages left centre? Possibly Helicopters?
Europe?
Are those dead fuselages left centre? Possibly Helicopters?
Europe?
"The baseball field doesn’t" there are baseball fields in Europe - especially around some old US airfields - and these days you even see soccA pitches in the USA - the world changes...............
Back to the challenge - East of the Rockies?
Back to the challenge - East of the Rockies?
Perkasie Heliport, Pennsylvania
The KLM Helicopters and NZ(O, then G then C) led me to https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/786
My question is: how the hell did it end up there if it crashed into the North Sea???
The KLM Helicopters and NZ(O, then G then C) led me to https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/786
My question is: how the hell did it end up there if it crashed into the North Sea???
Last edited by Ombinda; 14th May 2024 at 14:09.
from teh same link you quoted
"…their boneyard, a valuable source of repurposed parts, contain relics with stories. Way too many to list. But here are two. The remains of Sikorsky S-61N PH-NZC- flying to a North Sea oil rig, one rotor blade failed due to corrosion. All 6 crew lost May 1974. "
I'd guess that bits for an S-61 were more likely to be (re-) used in the USA than in Europe.
"…their boneyard, a valuable source of repurposed parts, contain relics with stories. Way too many to list. But here are two. The remains of Sikorsky S-61N PH-NZC- flying to a North Sea oil rig, one rotor blade failed due to corrosion. All 6 crew lost May 1974. "
I'd guess that bits for an S-61 were more likely to be (re-) used in the USA than in Europe.
Ombinda has it with Perkasie Heliport home of Carson Helicopters.
The largest S61/SH-3 refurbishing company.
They produce carbon fiber blades and can install a glass cockpit.
This one of the few locations where it is likely that S-61 hulks can be found.
But it also gives me some thoughts about which parts of a crashed and salt water submerged helicopter you can safely reuse and sell which makes it worthwhile to ship the whole carcass to the USA.
The largest S61/SH-3 refurbishing company.
They produce carbon fiber blades and can install a glass cockpit.
This one of the few locations where it is likely that S-61 hulks can be found.
But it also gives me some thoughts about which parts of a crashed and salt water submerged helicopter you can safely reuse and sell which makes it worthwhile to ship the whole carcass to the USA.