Thursday, June 2, 2016

The Navy still owns a PBY Catalina, though it's been abandoned in Brazil, and flipped over by a hurricane in North Carolina, it now hopes for restoration funds at an abandoned Brooklyn airport


“It was found at the end of a runway in Brazil about thirty five years ago, right in the middle of the rainforest,” he says.

According to Kuhnert, it had been leased to the Brazilian government during World War II for just $1—its mission, to patrol the waters of the Brazilian coastline for German U-boats.

Kuhnert said it still belongs to the Navy, but the Parks department arranged to bring it in pieces to Floyd Bennett to be restored.
http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/theres-an-art-deco-airport-lying-ruined-in-brooklyn


Several instruments are in that country’s language, Portuguese, and cartoons of a flying turtle in fading paint on either sides of the vertical stabilizer read “Devagar Mas Ciego Là”—“We’re Slow But We Get There."

Before the PBY became a HARP project, it was overseen by the U.S. Marines based in Cherry Point, North Carolina. It had just barely survived a hurricane. “The Marines loaded the wings with water for ballast but it flipped over anyway,” says Postel. “The wings were sheared off—the whole thing was a wreck.”


https://www.facebook.com/HistoricAircraftRestorationProjectHarp

http://www.airspacemag.com/military-aviation/restoration-going-the-distance-3350061/?no-ist
https://www.nps.gov/media/photo/gallery.htm?id=EFD24C1A-155D-451F-6737C82F6640C551

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