B-24/C-109 wreck on the Hump
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B-24/C-109 wreck on the Hump
Hi! Does anyone have info (serial numbers, accident reports) on B-24s or C-109s that might have crashed on the Hump? A friend found the remains of an aircraft that may be a B-24 or C-109 in a very remote part of India - above the treeline, near Burma - and I'm trying to identify it. I've looked everywhere I can think of for a list of all the aircraft lost on the Hump but have only found one partial one, for CNAC.
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Hi mate
Do you have any pics or parts to help? The surviving parts may still have their identifying numbers that were unique to each aircraft type.
Cheers
Andy
Do you have any pics or parts to help? The surviving parts may still have their identifying numbers that were unique to each aircraft type.
Cheers
Andy
Andy Wright
Aircrew Book Review
I have always imagined that paradise will be a kind of library - Jorge Luis Borges
Aircrew Book Review
I have always imagined that paradise will be a kind of library - Jorge Luis Borges
Yes, a few: they're at http://www.flickr.com/photos/harshmanra ... 218426486/.Andy in West Oz wrote:Hi mate
Do you have any pics or parts to help? The surviving parts may still have their identifying numbers that were unique to each aircraft type.
Cheers
Andy
They did find a part described as a "wing" with "21589" on it. I'm taking it as a USAAF serial number, possibly 42-1589, and the "wing" as the vertical tail. Unfortunately, that exact tail number was assigned to a Vultee BT-13A, which is unlikely to have turned up in the Himalayas. However, guessing that the last digit may be missing, 42-15890 through 42-15894 were all C-53-DOs. This is especially significant since they were looking for the wreck of CNAC C-53 tail number "58." If it turns out that one of these C-53s was passed on to CNAC, then they probably found the right wreck. It seems reasonable that the tail number could have been painted over in theater, but then exposed by the elements.
That, or it's simply a USAAF C-53.
My guess about it being a B-24 or C-109 was based on the engines and an accidental transposition of digits. To my knowledge they only found two engines at the site.
Yours,
Mike
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Hi Mike
She had a 3 blade prop/s too so that counts out the C-46 and supports your C-53 thoughts.
The actual parts themselves have a number code unique to the type of aircraft. For example (example only, can't remember any numbers off the top of my head), the C-53 might have had the code "61" as the parts identifier and the P-40 has the code "37". Or they might be three digit numbers.
Sorry I can't be too specific, been a while since I looked into this type of thing. The parts numbers are also stamped into the part and are pretty small.
Could a digit before the "21589" be missing?
Cheers
Andy
She had a 3 blade prop/s too so that counts out the C-46 and supports your C-53 thoughts.
The actual parts themselves have a number code unique to the type of aircraft. For example (example only, can't remember any numbers off the top of my head), the C-53 might have had the code "61" as the parts identifier and the P-40 has the code "37". Or they might be three digit numbers.
Sorry I can't be too specific, been a while since I looked into this type of thing. The parts numbers are also stamped into the part and are pretty small.
Could a digit before the "21589" be missing?
Cheers
Andy
Andy Wright
Aircrew Book Review
I have always imagined that paradise will be a kind of library - Jorge Luis Borges
Aircrew Book Review
I have always imagined that paradise will be a kind of library - Jorge Luis Borges
Hi Andy,
I do have a couple of photos of the part with the serial number that Kai didn't publish. Unfortunately they're multi-meg monsters. Here is a smaller version:
If you zoom in past the "9" you can see what appears to be the bottom of another digit. Since it's rounded I'm guessing a "3" or a "0." Since starting to look in to this we've learned that '93 suffered an accident in Tunisia on 9 Sep 44 while in USAAF service and may have been written off at that time; and that '90 was passed to China, possibly as one of seven C-53s that went to CNAC during the Jul-Dec '42 timeframe. So, current best guess is that this is '90. However, we still can't connect this with a CNAC serial.
Kai recovered some small parts, but unfortunately they appear to have been from radios and instruments and so wouldn't have that airframe type number (I don't think).
I do have a couple of photos of the part with the serial number that Kai didn't publish. Unfortunately they're multi-meg monsters. Here is a smaller version:
If you zoom in past the "9" you can see what appears to be the bottom of another digit. Since it's rounded I'm guessing a "3" or a "0." Since starting to look in to this we've learned that '93 suffered an accident in Tunisia on 9 Sep 44 while in USAAF service and may have been written off at that time; and that '90 was passed to China, possibly as one of seven C-53s that went to CNAC during the Jul-Dec '42 timeframe. So, current best guess is that this is '90. However, we still can't connect this with a CNAC serial.
Kai recovered some small parts, but unfortunately they appear to have been from radios and instruments and so wouldn't have that airframe type number (I don't think).
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Based on the number on the tail, I would say this is 42-1589* (the * indicating an unkown digit).
I've checked Joe Baugher's site and came up with the following:
42-15870/15894 : Douglas C-53-DO : c/n 7387/7411.
His site lists the C-53 as "Paratroop transport version of C-47. Fixed Skytrooper metal seats, no large cargo door, no reinforced floor, no astrodome" which corresponds with what Col has said.
One of which stands out as the one you were looking for:
15890 (c/n 7407) to China as CNAC 58. Crashed while flying the Hump in 1943 in Arunachal Pradesh, India.
Hope this is of assistance...
I've checked Joe Baugher's site and came up with the following:
42-15870/15894 : Douglas C-53-DO : c/n 7387/7411.
His site lists the C-53 as "Paratroop transport version of C-47. Fixed Skytrooper metal seats, no large cargo door, no reinforced floor, no astrodome" which corresponds with what Col has said.
One of which stands out as the one you were looking for:
15890 (c/n 7407) to China as CNAC 58. Crashed while flying the Hump in 1943 in Arunachal Pradesh, India.
Hope this is of assistance...
Last edited by Daniel Leahy on Sun Aug 27, 2006 6:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Thank you. The rest I had, but the link between the CNAC serial and the Douglas c/n and/or the USAAF serial is precisely what I was looking for. Where did "15890 (c/n 7407) to China as CNAC 58. Crashed while flying the Hump in 1943 in Arunachal Pradesh, India" come from? Is it from the PacificWrecks database?Daniel Leahy wrote:Based on the number on the tail, I would say this is 42-1589* (the * indicating an unkown digit).
I've checked Joe Baugher's site and came up with the following:
42-15870/15894 : Douglas C-53-DO : c/n 7387/7411.
His site lists the C-53 as "Paratroop transport version of C-47. Fixed Skytrooper metal seats, no large cargo door, no reinforced floor, no astrodome" which corresponds with what Col has said.
One of which stands out as the one you were looking for:
15890 (c/n 7407) to China as CNAC 58. Crashed while flying the Hump in 1943 in Arunachal Pradesh, India.
Hope this is of assistance...
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AeroTransport Data Bank
http://www.aerotransport.org/spooled/at ... ns_88.html
or
http://www.aerotransport.org/php/go.php?q=regn+42-15890
has 42-15890 listed but my session limits exceeded for this week :(
Does anyone have membership to this org?
http://www.aerotransport.org/spooled/at ... ns_88.html
or
http://www.aerotransport.org/php/go.php?q=regn+42-15890
has 42-15890 listed but my session limits exceeded for this week :(
Does anyone have membership to this org?
And I'm afraid Joe Baugher's info is from me--I was telling him about another C-47 I identified (42-92316) and added that I was convinced that CNAC 58 was the same as 42-15890 (which I am, in an optimistic sort of way). He took me at my word, but I'd still like to find some clincher linking the two numbers.
Hi Kai,
Well, drat. I was afraid it was too good to be true. However, we still have the aircraft cards coming from the gentleman at Accident Reports (I think he pulls them from the National Archives).
Even if they prove nothing new I think we're reasonably certain (say, 90%) this is a CNAC C-53. Factor in that the local people are sure this is #58 and that makes a strong case for it. However, there are some other missing CNAC C-53s, so I hate to close this out prematurely.
MANY THANKS TO EVERYONE ON THIS FORUM! YOU'VE BEEN A GREAT HELP!
Well, drat. I was afraid it was too good to be true. However, we still have the aircraft cards coming from the gentleman at Accident Reports (I think he pulls them from the National Archives).
Even if they prove nothing new I think we're reasonably certain (say, 90%) this is a CNAC C-53. Factor in that the local people are sure this is #58 and that makes a strong case for it. However, there are some other missing CNAC C-53s, so I hate to close this out prematurely.
MANY THANKS TO EVERYONE ON THIS FORUM! YOU'VE BEEN A GREAT HELP!