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#11
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#12
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"Tex Houston" wrote:
"Mark and Kim Smith" wrote in message ... Where'd the planes come from that were shown at the beginning of the movie? Where are they now? And for a question not based on reality, why wasn't the desert winds blowing them around? The aliens didn't leave them tied down or chocked. I didn't see the movie but a director once told me there's movies and there's real life. Were they MILITARY aircraft? Tex Of course...that area is plagued with very bad weather which likely accounts for the high number of incidents. It's also close to the deepest point in the Atlantic Ocean, the Puerto Rico Trench, some 25,000 feet deep. There's an Argus with the remains of it's 20 Canadian crewmembers lying on the bottom there forever. -- -Gord. |
#14
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The lost squadron was "Flight 19" and the circumstances surrounding
their disappearance has never been explained despite the above "simple explanation". None of the aircraft nor any sign of survival gear have ever been found. The flight leader didn't just get lost, the entire flight lost all bearing on where they were and could not establish a way back to base. The sky was reported as distorted, not making sense as well as time being lost. The above posts claims they crashed in the Triangle but they have never been found. Some excitement was caused years back when other TBM aircraft were discovered in the area but they were NOT Flight 19. For more information read the book "The Disappearance of Flight 19" (1980) by Larry Kusche (ISBN: 0060124776). Best place to get it from: www.bookfinder.com Rob From: (robert arndt) It has been satisfactorily explained several times beginning with the Navy Court of Inquiry in 1945. Several years ago a pilot who was also in the air at the same time and tried to communicate with Flight 19 mentioned in an interview that at the time there was no real mystery as to what happened. Everyone involved realized that the Flight Leader was disoriented including other members of the flight who tried to point out that they were headed in the wrong direction. These were Navy pilots trained to follow the orders of the flight leader. As for no wreckage being found it is a big ocean and even 5 TBMs are pretty small. By the time they crashed it was dark and there was a storm raging. Prospects of surviving that ditching are pretty small. Prospects of any wreckage being scattered to hell and gone are pretty great. Whole ships have been lost with no more wreckage left than would fill a suitcase. The aircraft will eventually be found where the half dozen radio fixes placed them about 100 miles northeast of the northern corner of Florida. The best book ever written on the subject of the Triangle is The Bermuda Triangle Mystery: Solved; it absolutely demolishes all the cockamamie theories with actual research with sources like the New York Times and Lloyds Shipping Register and records of Courts of Inquiry. John Dupre' |
#15
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"Dave Kearton"
wrote: "Gord Beaman" wrote in message .. . | (robert arndt) wrote: | | The sky was reported as distorted, not making sense | as well as time being lost. | | snort Riiiight!! | -- | | -Gord. (according to the program I saw...) At that time of the year off the Florida Keys, the horizon blends easily into the sky - similar to the sky full of snow that you'd be accustomed to. Snow?...what's that?...we have no snow here, it's been +5 or +6 deg here for a week or so and wasn't below +1 for a month before that here Dave. The primary difference between the two locations would be that Florida lacks huge quantities of Cumulo-granite. Not a lotta Cumulo-Granito here either, lot's of soft red earth good for growing potatoes though. The TV special that I saw went through the entire Bermuda Triangle myth and offered logical explanations to all of the major stories. I'm not sold on the idea of aliens or Atlantis or whatever - basically the special blamed the Canadians. Why blame us? hell the 'triangle' is ~800 miles south of us here. Makes sense to me. Cheers Dave Kearton (my smiley button isn't working - but you get the idea) Okkk... -- -Gord. |
#16
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One of Flight 19's Avengers was caught in a shrimper's net about
halfway between Key West and Marco Island about 15 years ago. look on a map and see how lost that guy was. As for the Bermuda Triangle, I flew 102s and 104s all over the southern part of it and am still here. I think. Wooo - woo. Walt BJ |
#17
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"Gord Beaman" wrote in message ... | "Dave Kearton" | wrote: | | (according to the program I saw...) | | | At that time of the year off the Florida Keys, the horizon blends easily | into the sky - similar to the sky full of snow that you'd be accustomed to. | | | Snow?...what's that?...we have no snow here, it's been +5 or +6 | deg here for a week or so and wasn't below +1 for a month before | that here Dave. | Thinking more about the 'career snow' that you would have encountered in the Argus. Our Orion crews rarely see _very_ cold weather, except when gong way down south along the Antarctic coast and on rotations to the northern hemisphere. Still, I suppose flying into a white out is similar to flying at night - if you're prepared (and trained) for it. | The primary difference between the two locations would be that Florida lacks | huge quantities of Cumulo-granite. | | Not a lotta Cumulo-Granito here either, lot's of soft red earth | good for growing potatoes though. Soft red earth may as well be granite in the wrong circumstances. | | The TV special that I saw went through the entire Bermuda Triangle myth and | offered logical explanations to all of the major stories. | | | I'm not sold on the idea of aliens or Atlantis or whatever - basically the | special blamed the Canadians. | | Why blame us? hell the 'triangle' is ~800 miles south of us here. | Only kidding Gord - the automatic ;-) should have deployed here. | Makes sense to me. | | | Cheers | | | Dave Kearton (my smiley button isn't working - but you get the idea) | | | Okkk... -- Cheers Dave Kearton | -- | | -Gord. |
#18
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WaltBJ wrote:
One of Flight 19's Avengers was caught in a shrimper's net about halfway between Key West and Marco Island about 15 years ago. look on a map and see how lost that guy was. As for the Bermuda Triangle, I flew 102s and 104s all over the southern part of it and am still here. I think. Wooo - woo. Walt BJ Mel Fisher and crew brought that plane up in 1987. A serial number check showed that it was not one of the five planes lost with Flight 19. -Marc -- Marc Reeve actual email address after removal of 4s & spaces is c4m4r4a4m4a4n a4t c4r4u4z4i4o d4o4t c4o4m |
#19
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Did Mel display it in front of his museum like he wanted? Mark
Marc Reeve wrote: WaltBJ wrote: One of Flight 19's Avengers was caught in a shrimper's net about halfway between Key West and Marco Island about 15 years ago. look on a map and see how lost that guy was. As for the Bermuda Triangle, I flew 102s and 104s all over the southern part of it and am still here. I think. Wooo - woo. Walt BJ Mel Fisher and crew brought that plane up in 1987. A serial number check showed that it was not one of the five planes lost with Flight 19. -Marc |
#20
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"tim gueguen" wrote in message news:RD1Ib.866484$9l5.274956@pd7tw2no...
"robert arndt" wrote in message om... (JDupre5762) wrote in message ... Where'd the planes come from that were shown at the beginning of the movie? Where are they now? And for a question not based on reality, why wasn't the desert winds blowing them around? The aliens didn't leave them tied down or chocked. Those were Navy TBM Avenger torpedo bombers that were supposed to represent the famous lost squadron of 5 TBMs that crashed in 1945 in the supposed Bermuda Triangle. The popular misconception is that the aircraft flew into some kind of "disturbance" and disappeared. The reality is that the flight leader became lost and disoriented and the aircraft ran out of gas at night in a storm. The lost squadron was "Flight 19" and the circumstances surrounding their disappearance has never been explained despite the above "simple explanation". None of the aircraft nor any sign of survival gear have ever been found. Right, because its hard to find a bunch of relatively small aircraft in a large area of ocean after the fact. But usually something like wreckage, debris, or floating bodies are found then or later. They NEVER found ANYTHING. The flight leader didn't just get lost, the entire flight lost all bearing on where they were and could not establish a way back to base. It was a training flight. Only the flight leader had any real navigation experience, and the other pilots relied on his direction. If he screwed up they were screwed. Not so as the leader was advised that turning west would be best. From his correct position in the north (he believed he was heading south) turning west would have taken the flight back over land. But the conditions stated below caused him to think otherwise so he declined and either headed straight north into the Atlantic or south into the Gulf of Mexico. The sky was reported as distorted, not making sense as well as time being lost. No, books written 3 decades later made that claim. Because those remarks were omitted from the "official" report. The flight leader could not determine position because they sky suddenly appeared to be blended and there was (at least in the mind of the flight leader) a loss of time. tim gueguen 101867 I don't in any way suggest alien abduction, nor necessarily the oft-claimed effects of the Triangle. But I do believe something other than "he simply got lost" is to blame. You can't use the big ocean excuse for not finding the planes. Deep See found a bunch of TBMs that they thought were Flight 19- turns out they weren't. If they sunk, they eventually will be found. If they disappeared, that's another story. And what about the other missing search plane too? Just coincidence? Rob |
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