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Plane lands on highway in TN....pilot killed

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Joined
Sep 5, 2004
Posts
113
Just saw it on Fox News, plane lands on highway 40 in TN, pilot killed, cant find the story anywhere on the internet.
 
I wish the media would hurry up and get something online
 
The weather in that part of TN was low, and deteriorating at the time of the crash. If it wasn't an aircraft problem, my bet would be scud running over the interstate towards better weather further west of the mountains, and hitting a power line.

AWG and total speculation. But not an unusual event in this part of the country.
 
That would be my best guess too. The ceilings here in TYS weren't too stellar. From what I've read, he was enroute from Sevierville to Little Rock for an airshow appearance.
 
my bet would be scud running over the interstate towards better weather further west of the mountains, and hitting a power line
Wow ... having driven a lot in that part of the state, the idea of having to thread the mountains in a scud run is terrifying. He must have really been out of options.

God speed, pilot.

Minh
 
Sad

It is a sad thing that the pilot died but these confederate air force and rich guys are steadily crashing our national heritage. I would like it much better if these things were firmly tied down in a museum.

Skyline
 
Skyline said:
It is a sad thing that the pilot died but these confederate air force and rich guys are steadily crashing our national heritage. I would like it much better if these things were firmly tied down in a museum.

Skyline


How quickly things change when it comes to warbirds!

As recently as 30 years ago, WWII-era aircraft were being removed from storage at Davis-Monthan AFB and melted down, turned into radio-controlled target drones, or just parked on a target range and strafed back into spare parts. Many of the aircraft in private ownership were sitting derelict in back lots and hangers, and there was no financial justification to get them back into the air. As the number of flyable aircraft grew fewer and fewer, the market price of some models grew from $10,000 to $50,000 to $200,000 to $500,000 over the course of 20 years, and suddenly even wrecks in remote jungles in Indonesia became candidates for restoration.
These days, aircraft like the Lockheed P-38 fetch more than one million dollars for a flyable example. Just 30 years ago, drag racers were buying them as surplus for $5000, taking the Allison engines out, and selling the rest for scrap. I guess you would call that a bad investment decision!

As anyone who has ever been to an airshow can attest, these aircraft are still impressive in the air, even 60 years after defeating Nazism and Japanese Imperialism. Seeing them in the air helps current generations understand the sacrifices our parents and grandparents made during WWII. These aircraft were built to fly, not sit gathering dust in a museum. There are plenty of airframes that are pulling museum duty, but for those that are flyable, I say keep them flying! The only time we should consider grounding a particular type for good is when there are only one or two examples remaining.

Organizations like the Commemorative Air Force, Valient Air Command, Planes of Fame, etc. are doing a tremendous job keeping these aircraft available for the public to see in their natural element. Restoring a warbird to flight can involve tens of thousands of man-hours of work, and maintaining them takes many, many hours of work for every hour of flight. Most of the work is provided by volunteers, some of whom worked on the planes during the war!
 
Skyline said:
It is a sad thing that the pilot died but these confederate air force and rich guys are steadily crashing our national heritage. I would like it much better if these things were firmly tied down in a museum.

Skyline

If it wasn't for these "rich guys," there would be absolutely zero flying examples and very, very few tied down in museums. Furthermore, very few people would give a hoot about the whole concept of "warbirds" and the story they represent, because nobody, except for those who saw them flying when the Department of War was footing the bill, could have whitnessed them firsthand.


If it weren't for dedicated and generous benefactors such as the Maloneys, Allens, Browns, and Hintons of the world, there is no way you or I could have have ever whitnessed a flying Hellcat, Corsair, Bearcat, Tigercat, etc. in person.....no way at all except for staring at the caged hanger queens at the Smithsonian.

But, then again, they're rich. So, everything is they're fault right?



Mr. Art Vance, godspeed and thank you for the shows,





NB
 
Last edited:
Stacked up

National Heratage

At the rate these things are getting stacked up it will only be a short time before they are all gone. I have never seen a Hellcat in person. It would a sad sad day if we were down to one. I have never seen an avenger either. Two years or so ago two guys crashed a one of a kind Hinkel in WY. Usually the pilots are low time millionaires who can afford more plane than they can Handel. To me it would be like burning down historical buildings because we wanted to see how the old fireplaces worked. I know they can fly. There is plenty of movie footage of that. I also know that they can crash and we are building up a growing inventory of movies of how well rare old planes can burn at airshows. We are past the point of having to save them from the scrap heap now we need to save then from their saviors. I think it would be a crime to let them all be destroyed one at a time. Even though they are privately owned these relics are a national treasure and should be protected like historical buildings.

Skyline
 
keep'em flying

I'm with EagleRJ. Until the world is down to a couple of museum quality samples ... keep'em flying. Tens of thousands more people see them at airshows than will ever visit a museum. Just hearing the sound they create during a low-pass at an airshow makes it all worthwhile.
 

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