Tuesday, February 21, 2017

two World War One DH9 bombers were found in an elephant stable in India, they are nearly finished being restored


A rare First World War bomber was discovered rotting in the elephant stable of a maharajah's palace, a de Havilland DH9 two-seat biplane is the only one in Britain and one of only six in the world.

Its chance discovery was made by a British backpacker, a keen aircraft enthusiast, who photographed a cannibalised DH9 in a new museum at the Palace of Bikaner in Rajasthan in 1995. He passed the word to an airplane restorer, Guy Black, who visited the palace in India 3 years later. But the aircraft had been moved to the palace's former elephant stables.


There, among piles of elephant saddles, was the airframe of the DH9, engineless, its timbers partly eaten by termites and much of its fabric covering missing.

Along one wall, were a dozen DH9 wings. Several tailfins were nearby.


He said: "I could not believe my eyes. The DH9 are as rare's as hen's teeth now and there wasn't a single one in a collection in Britain."

In the stables were the remains of three DH9s that been given by Britain to the Maharajah of Bikaner in the early 1920s to help him establish an air force under the post-war Imperial Gift Scheme.

Mr Black bought two of the rotting hulks. D5649, the plane he restored and sold to the Imperial War Museum for nearly £1 million was unveiled at Duxford, Cambridgeshire, yesterday. The Imperial War Museum, by luck, had a DH9 engine to instal in the restored plane.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1549157/Maharajahs-bomber-spreads-its-wings-again.html
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_pictures/6577629.stm

the second one is still in the works and not quite finished yet




http://www.bbc.com/news/business-33167009

2 comments:

  1. Now that's a barn find. Wow!!

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  2. In 1920, 60 DH.9 planes were given to India by Britain under the ‘Imperial Gift Scheme’—post-war surplus given to colonies and commonwealth countries to create their own air forces, also partly to pay back wartime contributions. Due to a lack of pilots, guns and training manuals, the planes were never used for an Indian Air Force but distributed amongst various states, firms and private individuals.

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