Friday, April 3, 2026

B-17 Graveyard in Kingman, Arizona after WWII.

 


6 comments:

  1. Made Zippos and razor blades out of the lot of them.

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    1. Zippos and razor blades are made out of stainless steel, B-17's were made out of aluminum.

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  2. Kingman is a boneyard full of small airliners mothballed since Covid, now. See also Pinal Air Park NW of Tucson. I remember well the Navy boneyard at Goodyear west of Phoenix in the 1960s - makes me cringe thinking of all the aircraft destroyed there.

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  3. Yeah, if you are in the Tucson area a visit to the Pima Air Museum and a drive around the perimeter of the boneyard at Davis Monthan Is a must.
    Back in the mid-90’s I was curious as to all the different tail insignias and airline logos on the planes at Pinal Air Park. I pulled off of I10 and drove out to the gate bur was turned away by guards carrying AR’s. Wouldn’t even let me take a photos.

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  4. Rickvid in the Yakima ValleyApril 3, 2026 at 12:12 PM

    I once worked at Boeing with a guy, Ted, who'd been a small child in Germany during the war. A group of us went to the Boeing Air Museum and we saw a large mural of a B-17 raid over Germany painted from the p.o.v. of one of the aircraft. Ted stood looking at it for a few moments, then bent over sideways as if to be looking upward at the flight. He stood back up and commented, "Ja, those are B-17s alright." He'd seen a lot of them from that angle. Ho, boy,

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  5. The young men who flew these planes in WWII were a breed apart. For a great read on their experiences see "Luck of The Draw" By Frank Murphy. The story of the "Bloody 100th" and the men he flew with.

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