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Allied and Soviet Air Forces Please use this forum to discuss the Air Forces of the Western Allies and the Soviet Union. |
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? lost Aircraft (UK to U.S. with UK WW2 technology)
Hi all,
I'm possibly wrong, sorry in advance, but I seem to remember (erroneously?) that I read somewhere that before (or during/after?) the true Tizard WW2 mission September 1940 (The team arrived in Halifax, Canada, on 6 September on board the CPR Liner Duchess of Richmond (later known as the RMS Empress of Canada), and went on to Washington, D.C., a few days later.) there were different technological items supposed to be shipped from UK to U.S. or Canada by an aircraft, which however crashed into the Atlantic ??? I thought this was mentioned either in Kai Bird: American Prometheus or in Richard Rhodes: Making of the Atomic Bomb but didn't find it using search function on pdf's of the two books. Does somebody know of such an incident or similar circumstances ? thank You, FrankieS Last edited by FrankieS; 16th April 2024 at 20:04. |
#2
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Re: ? lost Aircraft (UK to U.S. with UK WW2 technology)
sorry again, now ChatGPT gives the following input, but
i cannot confirm by checking internet resources, so possibly AI fiction or misunderstanding ? i'm searching for an incident prior to the WW2 Tizard mission when an aircraft was lost in the Atlantic carrying UK technology secrets ChatGPT The incident you're referring to is likely the loss of the British aircraft, a Lockheed Hudson, which occurred in September 1940. This aircraft was en route from the UK to Canada, carrying highly sensitive technology and documents, including details about radar and other classified equipment. Unfortunately, it crashed into the Atlantic Ocean, leading to the loss of both the aircraft and its valuable cargo. This incident underscored the need for secure transportation methods for sensitive information during wartime. what is the serial number or any other identifier (date etc.) of this loss ChatGPT The Lockheed Hudson aircraft lost in the Atlantic in September 1940 was designated as L7246. It departed from Aldergrove in Northern Ireland on September 8, 1940, and was headed for Gander in Newfoundland (now part of Canada). Tragically, the aircraft encountered bad weather and crashed into the Atlantic Ocean, resulting in the loss of its valuable cargo of technology secrets intended for delivery to Canada. Last edited by FrankieS; 16th April 2024 at 19:25. |
#3
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Re: ? lost Aircraft (UK to U.S. with UK WW2 technology)
L7246 is an Avro Manchester serial number!
AIR81 database searching for 8 September 1940 with a space in front of 8 here: https://www.rafcommands.com/database/air81/index.php Gives no suggested losses to match the AI attempt.
__________________
regards Dennis Burke Foreign Aircraft in Ireland 1939-1945 http://www.ww2irishaviation.com |
#4
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Re: ? lost Aircraft (UK to U.S. with UK WW2 technology)
thank you very kindly. also for the link.
it seems somehow strange that AI gave these concrete data: serial, date, places, cargo, circumstances. i did not succeed to find the true fate of serial L7246 on the internet. thank you, Frankie S |
#5
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Re: ? lost Aircraft (UK to U.S. with UK WW2 technology)
Could it have been this one ?
AIR 81/3136 Pilot Officer R G Cuthbert, Pilot Officer I H Dolman, Sergeant E Duffield, Sergeant M Rees: missing believed killed; failed to return from operational flight, Hudson N7268, 224 Squadron, 8 September 1940. Alex |
#6
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Re: ? lost Aircraft (UK to U.S. with UK WW2 technology)
Alex, this Hudson was on a North Sea patrol.
Leendert |
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Re: ? lost Aircraft (UK to U.S. with UK WW2 technology)
thanks.
mystery. |
#8
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Re: ? lost Aircraft (UK to U.S. with UK WW2 technology)
Geoffrey Sinclair adds
L7246 Manchester prototype, became instructional 3422M see https://www.lancasterbombers.net/for...ro-manchester/ Geoffrey Sinclair |
#9
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Re: ? lost Aircraft (UK to U.S. with UK WW2 technology)
Must find reference again, but an ASV system sent to Canada in that period is said to be lost on a sunk ship.
Found no air crash related to Tizard Mission after browsing the web so far. Just FYI and for curiosity sake, also see https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1339...ect-thumb--369 (March 27, 1942) and https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1340...ject-thumb--58 (Nov. 12, 1942). Regards, Leendert Reference to a lost ASV radar set in a sunk ship in David Zimmerman's book Top Secret Exchange. Last edited by Leendert; 24th April 2024 at 18:41. Reason: Info retraced |
#10
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Re: ? lost Aircraft (UK to U.S. with UK WW2 technology)
great many thanks folks,
super links, also, thank You. O.K., as to my memory naval ship at least also possible instead of aircraft. kind regardss FrankieS |
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