Author Topic: Sunken Motorcycles  (Read 377 times)

Offline dunnrite

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Sunken Motorcycles
« on: February 02, 2009, 02:04:41 PM »
Thought this might interest some of you guys!  I know we have a few motorcycle enthusiasts.

In October 1941 British ship 'SS Thistlegorm' was delivering vital supplies to the British 8th Army, the 'Desert Rats' in North Africa.
She was anchored in the Red Sea when she was attacked by two Heinkel 111 bombers of II/Kg26 Squadron from Crete, and was hit in the munitions hold by two 2000Kg bombs.
Two locomotives she was carrying on her decks were blown into the air by the explosion, and she went down in around 10 fathoms, together with vast amounts of munitions, cars, trucks, Lee-Enfield rifles, aircraft spares, armoured Rolls-Royces, tanks, medicines, loads of rubber 'Wellington' boots.... and scores of Norton 16H and BSA WD M20 motorcycles, stored in the back of trucks six deep to save space...
Jacques Cousteau found her in the early 50s, and retrieved one of the motorcycles, but didn't disclose where he found it. It lay undiscovered again until the late 90s, and has been plundered and vandalised ever since.



















































 :D
Amazing you could actually recruit that much suck into one squad.
Your Proctologist called, they found your head.

Offline Angus

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Re: Sunken Motorcycles
« Reply #1 on: February 02, 2009, 03:43:40 PM »
If you remember HMS Edinburgh, sunk on the Murmansk line, later to be found and unloaded with the gold she was full of,- there is many a goodie there. Including a vessel loaded with Spitfires. (Oiled crates).
It is not so deep there. But this motorbike site is better, - shallow, calm and warm...
It was very interesting to carry out the flight trials at Rechlin with the Spitfire and the Hurricane. Both types are very simple to fly compared to our aircraft, and childishly easy to take-off and land. (Werner Mölders)