Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
On a different note, two of the crew perished. With all of the admin hurdles the MoD imposes over war graves, how was this overcome?
Personally I see the Halifax as a badly wasted opportunity
According to The Battle of Britain:Then and Now, Vol V it was a Do17, Wnr. 1160, 5K+AR of 7./KG 2; Shot down by fighters, force landed Goodwin Sands 11:40am. August 26. Gefr. Huhn killed; Uffz Ritzel missing: Fw Essbert captured wounded and Uffz Reinhardt captured. According to The Blitz:Then and Now, Vol One it had been on a sortie to bomb West Malling and had both engines shot out by fighters.
In that photo, the engines are still on the sea bed, only the empty nacelles are showing, so a tad difficult to say that an engine was running. The separate prop in front of the port engine (the aircraft is on its back) shows damage concurrent with a stopped or windmilling engine, with the blades bent to the rear - if it had been under power, the blades would bend forward. It's possible the other engine might still have been running though.Looks like at least one engine was running. The part of the wing root not covered in barnicles looks like its in really good shape.
Its lying on its back.
No. If an engine is stopped, or throttled right back, and with lack of power, the prop blades offer little resistance when they strike, and will bend backwards, even if apparently turning relatively fast. Depending on the angle of strike, and how quickly the prop comes to a sudden stop, it's possible for one, two or all three blades (on a 3 blade metal prop) to be bent.I'm a bit confused here, That's the gear reduction facing up, correct? Every pic I ever seen with the engine under power and the plane crash landing on land or water, the prop blades were always bent back, like in the pic above. Wind milling too, albeit just one or two blades bent back, depending on the speed of rotation.