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-   -   Beverley Woes (https://www.pprune.org/military-aviation/653001-beverley-woes.html)

NutLoose 31st May 2023 11:28

Beverley Woes
 
They have tried to offer it free to any museum, but a lack of interest is possibly dooming it to its fate.

film in link

https://www.itv.com/news/calendar/20...being-scrapped

Krystal n chips 31st May 2023 16:20


Originally Posted by NutLoose (Post 11443538)
They have tried to offer it free to any museum, but a lack of interest is possibly dooming it to its fate.

film in link

https://www.itv.com/news/calendar/20...being-scrapped

I'm sure this has been raised before on here, but, the "problem" with the poor old Bev,is, that, it only has iconic status for a niche market. The general public are much more likely to view it as an oddity.. that flew.

Not forgetting the current condition, corrosion doesn't take any prisoners after all, and the cost of dismantling / transport / re-assembly in the current financial crisis would almost certainly be another prohibitive factor

DaveReidUK 31st May 2023 17:48

The fact that it's the last surviving Beverley is largely down to the RAF and the "care" they took of the one at Hendon.

Cornish Jack 1st Jun 2023 10:13

Lots of Bev memories starting in '58 (some tragic) but It was never appreciated (or operated) in its intended role and that's not likely to change now. Like its similarly 'odd' transporter, the 'Belslow' it will be remembered photographically because it's too big to make for easy storage. Shame, but there's little or no profit to be made in nostalgia ! :sad:

ancientaviator62 1st Jun 2023 10:38

The same fate will no doubt be in store for the Cosford Hercules. They are not waterproof so will rot from thee inside as well as out.

NutLoose 1st Jun 2023 12:30

And the VC10, when I visited the landing lights in the nose were full of water, the simple expediency of either resealing the covers or drilling a hole in the bottom of the perspex lens would allow it to drain.. the wing tanks were open as well underneath, and no mesh had been put over the holes allowing birds to get in and moisture too. I remember the ones at Abingdon where the spars were in their own swimming pool and wonder how long 808 will last.
Really they all want some external roof putting over them.... and don't get me started on what was an immaculate Catalina dragged outside to make way for a corporate events area.... to drive revenue for aircraft restoration.. that will be needed in the future, due to the aircraft being shoved outside, a sort of self licking lolipop.

SWBKCB 31st Jan 2024 13:28


A fundraising campaign has been launched by a small museum in Cumbria which wants to provide a permanent home to the world’s last surviving Blackburn Beverley. A project to dismantle and move the giant aircraft from the former military museum at Fort Paull near Hull has stalled and the plane was in danger of being scrapped. Solway Aviation Museum, based at Carlisle Airport, has come to the rescue - but needs to raise £60,000.
The appeal will help fund the lifting and transport costs for the huge sections of aircraft, as well as ground preparation of the new site.
https://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news...kshire-4497996

Jhieminga 1st Feb 2024 08:46

Solway Aviation Museum has taken on a very interesting challenge, but I'm sure they're up to the job!


sandiego89 1st Feb 2024 12:35

That is great news, sole survivors should be preserved.

Good on the Solway Museum

Ninthace 1st Feb 2024 14:32

It is dead easy to get the boom off a Beverley. All you need is a glider, a cross wind and a winch cable.

NutLoose 1st Feb 2024 15:25

I do hope they can pull it off, although a small Museum they do look after their aircraft, the Vulcan being one, it would be nice to see them get it ok. They are based not far from where I was born and spent my misspent youth.. ermmm, grew up.

SWBKCB 9th Mar 2024 19:26


The Solway Aviation Museum's quest to acquire a historic Blackburn Beverley XB259 aircraft is edging closer to its target. Dougie Kerr, the museum's chairman, confirms that efforts to raise the needed £60,000 have almost reached the £40,000 mark.The museum aims to dismantle and transport the aircraft from Fort Paull, Hull to Carlisle Airport, where it will join the museum's extensive collection of heritage aircraft, which includes the Avro Vulcan XJ823.
https://www.newsandstar.co.uk/news/2...verley-target/

papa_sierra 10th Mar 2024 13:03

Whenever the Beverley is mentioned it always triggers a memory of two of our entry at RAF Halton who died in the crash of a Beverley in Malaya in 1967. https://www.baaa-acro.com/aircraft/b...b-101-beverley
R I P Brian George and Ernie Trigwell, both Flight Engineers..

teej013 10th Mar 2024 13:36

According to their web site :

https://www.solway-aviation-museum.co.uk/

They now have a "just giving" page to rescue and preserve the Beverley.

NutLoose 5th Apr 2024 09:28

They have done it!! 60K raised to move her to my home town... :ok::ok::ok:


Solway Aviation Museum has raised £60,000 and cash and offers of help continue to come in to move the partially dismantled aircraft from Fort Paull, near Hull.

Backers include the Beverley Association and a company near Hull has offered to lend a wagon to transport parts of the world’s last surviving Blackburn Beverley, which will have to be lifted out over the fortress walls.

The last of only 49 ever built at Brough in East Yorkshire, the giant Beverley XP259 was used for troop and cargo transport by the Royal Air Force until 1967.

Previously the plane was on show at Fort Paull until it closed in January 2020.

The wings, engines and tailplane were taken off by engineers working for previous owner Martyn Wiseman, who bought it at auction and whose own rescue mission ran out of steam.

He is donating the aircraft to the museum, next to Carlisle Lake District Airport, for free.

Museum chairman Dougie Kerr said: "People have been so generous, whether donating money or volunteering to come and help us. Last night someone donated £2,000.

"We've had a £990 donation from a guy in New York. At the weekend I did a piece for a magazine in New Zealand.

"People are saying to me you must be mad – but you are brave to do it. We've been contacted by a guy called Mike, who has a transport business from the Hull area and he’s willing to help with a wagon and forklift.

"The money is now there to transport it from Hull to here and when it gets here we will reassemble it and paint it and any parts that are beyond repair we will have to replace or get manufactured."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/othe...0dd28d22b&ei=6



DogTailRed2 5th Apr 2024 09:45

That's great news and something I had been hoping for ever since I watched the RAF Museum hack their example to metal death.
I wonder if she can be dismantled or will she need to be chopped up to facilitate transport?

NutLoose 5th Apr 2024 09:57

She is partially dismantled now and was dismantled previously for the move to Fort Paull, they are simply dismantling it as before to transport it.
The pictures below are from

https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=...25796941443214


https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....c4390b91a5.jpg


https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....6bacaa6e70.jpg
https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....08c60b6048.jpg
https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....c9c1c12e25.jpg


Krystal n chips 5th Apr 2024 10:58

Taking the (comparatively) easy bits off is fine, but, presumably they won't be dismantling its tummy....hence the potential for one of the more interesting trucking documentaries covering the move.

NutLoose 5th Apr 2024 12:07


Originally Posted by Krystal n chips (Post 11629687)
Taking the (comparatively) easy bits off is fine, but, presumably they won't be dismantling its tummy....hence the potential for one of the more interesting trucking documentaries covering the move.

Looking at these pictures from the previous move, it appears the cockpit section was unzipped from the belly which would make the move more attainable.


https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....b2896e3753.jpg

It looks like there is a transportation split running back to the tail so it can all come off, some pictures here showing surviving cockpits appear to show they have been removed at the transportation join.

Oldprops Blackburn Beverley

Biggus 5th Apr 2024 12:19

I remember being told a story about a Beverley flying up the Rhone Valley into a headwind, and someone looking out the window and seeing the aircraft being overtaken by a train in the valley floor below.

I have no reason to doubt the veracity of the tale.


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