The only thing you can get from PNG is malaria.
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The only thing you can get from PNG is malaria.
and gold, copper, silver, timber, oil and that old fave..... natural gas.
Quote:
Originally Posted by herosrest
I can get natural gas via beans... :rolleyes:
Long live pork and beans. :D
The aircraft detail has come to light.
41-38339 c/n 14A-270 P-39 D-1-BE Sumac arrived by SS Stephen Fields USAAF 15-Aug-42
Unit:35thFS/8thFG USAAF Contract AC156 1/6/41
Went missing MIA ex Garbutt, Townsville to cover two schooners that left Wedau for GiliGili 27/09/1942(Given blurry but recorded 25/09/42)
Pilot:Capt PAUL BROWN 0-417000 MIA
http://www.squadron.com/images/large/SO32002.jpg
http://www.squadron.com/NoStock.asp?item=SO32002
41-38338, 'Nip’s Nemesis II', 36th Fighter Squadron
First is 41-38338, a P-39D of the 36th Fighter squadron (FS), 8th Fighter Group (FG) based at Port Moresby New Guinea in 1942. The aircraft is named “Nip’s Nemesis II” and was flown by Lieutenant Don “Fibber” McGee.
36th's first kill in moresby.http://www.aerothentic.com/historica...2Published.htm
http://wunderwaffe.narod.ru/Magazine...sPlanes/01.jpg
Details of the mission during which 41-38339 was lost are misleading.
Wedau is located on the North east coast of Papua NG,
some 25 miles (by air) from Gilli gilli wharf - Milne bay.
The coastal journey is much longer but within the p-39's range.
This mission could not be flown direct from Garbutt, Townsville.
And it all comes with a dose of malaria, and other diseases if yer not careful. :rQuote:
Originally Posted by herosrest
There are interesting accounts and detail here www.futurepd.org/les/Documents/NewBook%20B.pdf
of various Us and australian activity in the Oro bay, Wedau area during 42, including coast watching, supply and air sea rescue.
:t
Quote:
Originally Posted by herosrest
Quote:
Originally Posted by herosrest
http://www.world-war-2-planes.com/im...39_cockpit.jpg Airacobra cockpit.
SOURCES Wartime reports:
Combat Reports (RAAF Form A.108A) for Lt. P.G. Brown, 36 FS (27 May 42) ; Lt. F. Royal, 39 FS (4 Jul 42); Lt. J.C. Price, 39 FS (4 Jul 42); and, Capt. E. L. Egenes, 40 FS (6 Jul 42) (cited by pilot's last name)
In later actions combat reports sometimes offer helpful insights into the relative performance of the two aircraft. Lt. Paul G. Brown chased a Zero at 12,000 feet. "He nearly stayed away from me at 350 mph" (Brown). In a low level action: "I indicated 320 mph straight and level at 1,000 feet. Zero kept me in range" (Royal). In another action on the same day Zeros encountered P-39s and P-400s at 21,000 feet. "Zeros stayed with the Airacobras. I dived 12,000 feet indicating 450 miles per hour and Zero stayed with me and followed me to ground level firing. Lt. Martin pulled him off me" (Price). "4 Zeros were over Kokoda and attacked us on the way home. We were barely able to out speed them at 10,000 feet. We were indicating about 350 mph in a very slight dive. Their probable speed 340 mph" (Egenes).
Woodlark Island http://www.pacificwrecks.com/provinc..._woodlark.html
P-39 Airacobras taking off and taxing http://www.pacificghosts.com/video/f...s/sample2.html
A6M2 Zero Tail Number U-107 http://pacificwrecks.com/aircraft/a6m2/murakami.html
You should go and spend a couple of years there, become a beachcomber and do some diving, before you get to old.
My brother in law lives on his yacht in the whitsundays and sails the south pacific.
He was a patrol officer in the new guinea highlands in the 1960s.