War History Online presents this Guest Article from respected Blogger and Author Hans Wiesman. Check out his book and his blog.
In this Dakota Hunter Blog, you will read about a weird boneyard aka a Museum collection of aircraft to be restored in Tatoi, Greece. Until recently, this unique collection of wartime and post-wartime aircraft was kept strictly “closed” or only accessible with a special permit.
For years, it seemed that the Greek Military Authorities had a near- paranoia approach toward “Peeping Toms” who with cameras tried to film/photograph the vintage aircraft on Greek Air Force bases (AFBs).
It was since long time known to me that the Hellenic Air Force (HAF) still had a fleet of aging, out phased C-47s/ Dakotas standing there on their AFB, rotting away in open air. I even tried once via the Military Attache of the Dutch Embassy to launch a serious effort to visit their AFB and hoped with that to get an entry to purchase their surplus parts. All those efforts were in vain and I lost my interest, as I could harvest with more ease the C-47 surplus stocks of other Air Forces in the world.
Worse, not so long ago , a group of Dutch aircraft spotters stood there outside a Greek AFB gate, trying to film the vintage WW II survivors. For some reason (that I don’t know), they were arrested by the Guards and locked up for days. Only to be released after the intervention of the Dutch Embassy.
Possibly, they had trespassed a high barbed wire fence and ventured into the Greek Area 51? Not very likely, considering their average age, so maybe it was that old paranoia that played up again, of a rather closed Military Culture, living for decades with a neighboring threat.
Such tense atmosphere does not allow for any hanky panky with cameras at any Military gate, as we all know. Even if only the best that they could see was a fleet of 15-year-old operational F-16s, the mere photographing and counting of their numbers was considered a form of spying for their arch rival Turkey. So a serious offense, a good reason for court-martialing.
I always knew that this was the cradle of the epic Spyplanes U-2 and SR-71 in the 1960’s -1970’s and all Black (Stealth) Jets that followed ever since.
On our 6000 miles long Harley trip (from Vancouver to Sturgis, from there to Las Vegas and via SF back to Vancouver), coming out of Las Vagas, I decided to go there, trying to catch a glimpse.
In my ever optimistic opinion, it was such hyped aircraft that flashed overhead at Mach 3+ as we heard a faint distant rumble while this photo was taken.
It could well have been a thunder clap from the mountains (OK, unlikely with the sunny weather).
But as we later stood there with mixed feelings of confusion and excitement, right in front of a closed gate of Area 51, we evidently interpreted it as the sonic boom of the Top Secret X-69 (the rocket powered Mach 4 Phallus symbol nobody has ever seen).
This was the self-explained evidence that we were close to what we came for. But the Restricted Area/ No Access signs and the swiveling cameras on top of the fence poles made clear to us that we were very unwelcome. That was years ago, and we understood that any further action to come closer was no good idea. But ever since my youth, all that what comes close to a test facility, a boneyard, hidden aircraft in hangars, abandoned airframes in a desert etc, that all has my very special attention and always my curiosity tickled all my nerves endings.
Deliberately or by sheer coincidence, I have visited many such places all over the Globe. In this “Boneyard” series of my Blogs, I will start with that Greek Tatoi Boneyard/ Museum collection with some remarkable photos.
Tatoi (Dekelia), situated near the Capital Athens is a Greek Air Force Base with a museum.
In 1939 , the Blitz Krieg was to be rolled out all over Eastern Europe while in 1940, Western Europe (France and the Low Countries) felt the pounding power of the mechanized Nazi War Hammer.
Their opponents always fought with inferior weapons and lower mobility (with often still the WWI style massive horse back riding troops and artillery pulled by horse spans).
On top, the stunning lack of `panzer`protection made them very vulnerable for the freely swarming Stukas and Messerschmitts that rapidly won air superiority in all continental war theaters from Poland to the Baltic States.
But rolling into Western Europe since May 1940, things became more complicated.
And one day in summer 1940, the Stukas were confronted with the British RAF Spitfire and Hurricane fighters. The Nazi Machine came over to fight the air superiority over the British Islands.
The factor of surprise was gone, they had to fight over enemy territory for the first time against modern fighters with dedicated and well-trained pilots. As a result, they never gained their much-wanted air superiority over the UK.
The momentum and initiative slipped out of their hands, and before the Nazis realized it, the heydays of the Stuka were over.
“Gruppen” of Stukas were shot out of the air with their relatively low top speed and slow climbing rate.
The Luftwaffe had to withdraw the type from operations over the British Islands, a nightmare scenario for the Great Furher and his staff.
The Battle of Britain came to an end on 31 October 1940 and so came the reputation of the Stuka as being “Wodan’s invincible War Hammer from the Sky”.
But the type soldiered on: at the Russian Front, in the North African campaign and in Greece where the Italian Forces capitulated in September 1943 , leaving tons of extra pressure on the German occupying forces.
It was exactly in this confusing period of retreat and betrayal that the Stuka from the Tatoi Boneyard was shot down and plunged into the sea, where it was hidden for the next 63 years.
I am no expert with German aircraft from WWII, so in search of good information about that plane, I came across this article, very informative:
Ju-52 History
Nicknamed “Tante Ju” (Auntie Ju) and “Iron Annie” by Axis and Allied troops, the Junkers Ju-52 was the most famous German transport of the war. The Ju-52 was built of corrugated metal skin and paid little attention to beauty, features of a typical Junkers design. Parts and pieces stuck out of the airframe, and the corrugated skin, though much stronger than fabric and metal tubes, created stronger air resistance.
In April 1931, the originally single-engined Ju-52 prototype was fitted with three engines. Performance improved tremendously and production of the new model immediately began. The Ju-52 served as an airliner for many nations. Finland, Spain, Sweden and Germany were just a few. It served as a mail carrier in China, and, fitted with floats, hauled lumber in remote places in Canada. Its most commom work, however, was done with the German Lufthansa. Equipped with luxuries like a typewriter and oxygen masks, the Ju-52 could fly from Berlin to Rome in eight hours over the Alps, an impressive feat for contemporary aircraft, let alone an airliner.
The military potentials of the Ju-52 was not overlooked by the Luftwaffe. It entered service as a troop transport and bomber. In the Spanish Civil War, the Ju-52 ferried some 10’000 Moorish troops from Morocco to Spain, and bombed Madrid while, quite embarrassingly, some Lufthansa Ju-52s were in the airport serving as airliners. Later in World War II, the Ju-52 served in every theater in which Germany participated. It dropped paratroopers in the Netherlands, Crete and later the Ardennes. It carried supplies to beleaguered troops in North Africa, Stalingrad, and the Baltic states. The Ju-52 was slow and very lightly armed against fighters. As a result, it suffered horrible losses in almost all actions, especially over Crete, the Mediterranean, and Stalingrad. Many types of replacement were built, but none was as popular or reliable as good old Auntie Ju. Right until the end of the war the Ju-52 was still soldiering on to help stave off defeat. The last Ju-52s went out of service with the Swiss Air Force in the late 1980s, over 50 years after the first of these durable aircraft first took to the air. Some Ju-52s are still flying today.
This Information was found on the website http://www.ju52-3m.ch/about.htm
Only a decade later, in the early 1930’s , the US builders Boeing, Lockheed and last but not least Douglas, went to venture into the universe of the all-metal passenger transport aircraft.
The winner coming out of that “US first all-metal aircraft” competition with revenue making potential was the iconic Douglas DC-3, an airplane not built with corrugated plating, but with sheet aluminum panels, riveted on stringers and ribs.
The Junkers Ju-52 was first built in 1931, the DC-3 came out 5 years later and went into production in 1936.
The dimensions of both aircraft were more or less equal, but the DC-3 was designed in a wind tunnel and had a far lower drag coefficient with retractable main wheels, better streamlining over its wings and fairings covering the wing roots.
Hence , the DC-3 had a distinct edge in speed. flight range and payload with only 2 engines of 1200 max HP each, against the Ju-52 with 3 engines of 900 max HP each.
Douglas had the more advanced design and manufacturing methods, along with the better-performing twin aero engines concept, that made their DC-3 / C-47 the winner.
Only five years ahead in development, but with a world of difference in technology. Question left: would there be a DC-3 if there was no Ju-52 as its pioneering all-metal forerunner?
History lets you guess, fact is that such competition drives the World into progress and improvement. And that is also why we have now a cell phone, GPS, PC, and a Hi-Def camera, all packed in a single little box smaller than that old school pack of cigarettes. That truly is a little wonder.
And that is also why we have now a cell phone, GPS, PC, and a Hi-Def camera, all packed in a single little box smaller than that old school pack of cigarettes. That truly is a little wonder.
More news about this stunning Collector’s Item will follow soon with more detailed and awesome photos.
In my book The Dakota Hunter , you can read what happened out there in my dealings with the Colonels.
You will be amazed to see how this ended and how those Vietnam Veteran C-47s have disappeared forever into the abyss of the Indian Ocean, due to ignorance, mismanagement, and greed of some ex-Colonels.
I saw this happen also in Madagascar, Honduras, Bolivia and Venezuela where I arrived on the scene of a C-47 Boneyard, hoping to salvage the airframes. But in many cases , it was all in vain. The Colonels just won. like here in this photo above, taken in Thailand.
With all my adventures and encounters with the planes, pilots, the remote communities, the Military and the War/ Drugs Lords, I have collected my stories in a book of 320 pages, engagingly written and illustrated with 250 unique photos.
Evidence of my 20 years of expeditions, in search of the legendary DC-3. I found them crashed, stored, abandoned, or still flying, in all states of despair, in boneyards as you see one here in this Blog. But also in situations where the Dakota still reigns as the only transport to bring you in and out of the Amazon Jungle.
Come with me to see the wrecks and crashed aircraft that I visited for recovering the intact parts, and always with that indomitable curiosity and the questions that I ask since my youth years in Borneo “… and what happened here?”.
It means diving into the history of the final and often fatal flight of the wrecks I ran into.
For ordering this book, you can go directly to the Amazon page by clicking here at Ordering at Amazon The Dakota Hunter Book.
For 5-star reviews of my book The Dakota Hunter, scroll down on that Amazon page. For Previews and my earlier Dakota Hunter Blogs , click here at dc3dakotahunter.com.
Special thanks to Mr. Heimo Stadlbauer for his outstanding photos and info and to Mr. Bas Ter Haar Romeny for his contributions and initiative for this Blog.
If you might have a fascinating story to tell about vintage aviation, backed up with a good set of photos, but you don’t want to get through the hassles of writing a Blog.
You can contact me and we’ll see if we can do a `joint production` of a Blog of my Facebook network and on War History Online Magazine.
Enjoy, Hans Wiesman, author of The Dakota Hunter
Jacket design of my book shown below, Casemate Publishers USA/UK. ISBN 978-1-61200-258-3. Also available as “Autographed version”, see my website.