olyclimber Posted June 2, 2016 Posted June 2, 2016 (edited) Anyone have any interesting old plane crash locations to share? I was looking for the one on C141 Peak in the Olympics before I realized they removed the wreckage. You can see the one over by Tubal Cain mine: click here Edited June 2, 2016 by olyclimber Quote
olyclimber Posted June 2, 2016 Author Posted June 2, 2016 supposed to be one near the snout of the Humes too. Don't see anything. http://www.windsox.us/VISITOR/HISTORY_BUILDINGS/PLANE_CRASHES.html Humes snout Quote
olyclimber Posted June 2, 2016 Author Posted June 2, 2016 The link above mentions Ome Daiber. That guy was a legend. I want to say I met him when I was in the boy scouts, but I can't remember clearly. If I did meet him, he was quite old at the time. FA of Liberty Ridge, etc. Quote
Giles Posted June 2, 2016 Posted June 2, 2016 I've been back on that side of Olympus. There is still much wreckage at the toe of the Humes. We didn't see anything large tho, just relatively small pieces all over. Quote
chirp Posted June 3, 2016 Posted June 3, 2016 Mt Charleston crash, pretty surreal up close. http://nvahof.org/_original_site/c54_crash.html Quote
JosephH Posted June 4, 2016 Posted June 4, 2016 My father flew the civilian version for United and was not overly fond of it or the DC-6 which was kind of raining out of the sky in the 50s. They called my mother shortly after I was born and told her he had gone down in one (a 6), but it turned out to be a different flight and crew. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_accidents_and_incidents_involving_the_Douglas_DC-4 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_accidents_and_incidents_involving_the_Douglas_DC-6 Quote
Buckaroo Posted June 5, 2016 Posted June 5, 2016 The base of the N side of Slesse is too low of resolution, but anyone that's been through there has at least seen the props and wheels. Slesse This brings up another story... When I was living in New Mexico I had heard of a crash site on the West face of the Sandia Crest. The Crest is a 10,000 ft high ridge on the East side of Albuquerque, it rises above Albuquerque for 5,000' at a 45 deg angle on it's Western face. On February 19, 1955 at 7:03 am TWA flight 260 crashed with all 16 on board lost. Originally blamed on pilot error it was later suspected to be a heading instrument defect. It was heavy cloud cover and IFR and they were supposed to be going North but headed straight West into the mountain. One of my friends from work (Pete) had been to the site and recovered some pieces. Another friend at work named Mark had been really interested in seeing the site but had been unable to find it after multiple attempts. I had pretty good route finding skills at the time and Pete sketched me a diagram/map of how to find the site. So me and Mark with his wife and son in tow drove to the top of the Crest and proceded down the steep face as described by Pete's map. We found the site right away and here's where it starts to get weird. Mark got really sick as soon as we came upon the crash site. We stayed for about an hour and found many pieces of wreckage including some bone fragments which Mark found. Mark was describing bad flu like symptoms and you could see he wasn't doing too well. We eventually headed back up to the car at the top of the crest, where Mark mysteriously and suddenly started feeling well again and after 10 minutes or so was feeling completely fine. But that apparently was nothing compared to the news Mark got the very next day. Apparently one of his close personal friends had crashed his WW2 replica airplane straight into the side of a mountain in Arizona, at almost the exact same time we were at the NM crash site the day before. The two people on board both perished in the accident. https://www.google.com/search?q=Sandia+crest+airplane+crash&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjSiJHN_I_NAhVN9GMKHY3dABsQsAQIOA&biw=1600&bih=789 Quote
JasonG Posted June 5, 2016 Posted June 5, 2016 We just climbed withing a couple hundred feet of this wreckage yesterday (most is still there): http://www.bellinghamherald.com/news/local/article27313879.html Sobering. Quote
chris_w Posted June 12, 2016 Posted June 12, 2016 I ran across a small plane crash on Snoqualmie mountain a few years ago. Couldn't find it on any maps. We were about 800ft below the summit and cut across to climb lundin. It was somewhere on Snoqualmie south side. Quote
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