Welcome to Cockpitbuilders.com. Please login or sign up.

April 26, 2024, 09:20:23 PM

Login with username, password and session length

PROUDLY ENDORSING


Fly Elise-ng
370 Guests, 0 Users
Members
  • Total Members: 4,154
  • Latest: xyligo
Stats
  • Total Posts: 59,641
  • Total Topics: 7,853
  • Online today: 392
  • Online ever: 582
  • (January 22, 2020, 08:44:01 AM)
Users Online
Users: 0
Guests: 370
Total: 370

COUNTDOWN TO WF2022


WORLDFLIGHT TEAM USA

Will Depart in...

Recent

Welcome

Boneyards mystery

Started by jackpilot, October 29, 2009, 05:19:18 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

jackpilot

Like most of us I have seen  pictures of hundreds of airliners, row after row,in the desert, or those boneyards where they end up in pieces....sad..yes!
But it always seemed to me that these places were totally off-limits, nobody knowing where they are exactly, sort of mystery, secret, no man's land etc etc.
Is there a way to visit  one of these yards, shop for parts, browse the place????
Would be more fun than the usual EBay stores and a nice place for a simmers big meeting..
Just floating some insane ideas...lol


Jack

autocadplease

Here is some info Jack: http://www.johnweeks.com/boneyard/index.html#SITEE
It would be a cool trip to see some of those sites (and a few $$$ to spend there too).
Grant D.
Nelson, B.C.
FSX PM Boeing TH2Go

jackpilot

Thank you, very interesting reading.
Maxton Airport and Roswell, NM seem to be the most probable places to visit.....

this one for Michael:
http://www.johnweeks.com/boneyard/photos/kingman01.jpg


Jack

Trevor Hale

I would love to make a trip to a boneyard..  I bet so many of those places have stories to tell.  That would make for an amazing trip.  I would volunteer my back yard if they would be able to get the planes to my house :)

Trev
Trevor Hale

Owner
http://www.cockpitbuilders.com

Director of Operations
Worldflight Team USA
http://www.worldflightusa.com

VATSIM:

phil744

There are a few places i know of here in the UK, but nothing on the scale like you have over in the US.

There is a video on youtube of some dude basically running around one of these boneyards, if it want blocked at work i would find it for you, walks over to a 747 cockpit lying on its side, just walks in and goes, "ohh, that has some of the switches were after" and helps himself, brings a tear to my eye, me personally would love to just spend a day, okay be honest with myself here, a week, month year... sod it live there, just to wander uninteruppted around must be somthing else,

If you chaps ever sort somthing out count me in, but not wanting to sound kinky here but u will have to put me on a lead, otherwise you would lose me rather quickly.

hehehe we are the vultures of the aviation world, and i would love nothing more but to feast on the carcass of a 747, mmm yummy (dribbles also)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
757-200, P3D, LD767,Arduino, panels by some british moron, pile of dead airplane parts and a hammer!

Yeah i got one of these facebook things too http://www.facebook.com/Simvionics

Boeing Skunk Works

If I ever visited a 727 boneyard I don't think I could contain myself.
Why yes...I am a rocket scientist...

Boeing, Collins, Gables, Sperry, PPG, Korry, Pacific Scientific, Honeywell

Like the Website ?
Support Cockpitbuilders.com and Click Below to Donate