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Rare WWII Dornier 17 plane to be raised from seabed


Subdeacon Joe

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Rare WWII Dornier 17 plane to be raised from seabed

 

Work is beginning to raise a German bomber from the floor of the

English Channel more than 70 years after it was shot down during the

Battle of Britain.

The Dornier 17 is that last of its kind and lies in 15m (50ft) of water on the Goodwin Sands off the coast of Kent.

Originally designed as a fast reconnaissance aircraft, slim

and manoeuvrable, it had been converted by the Luftwaffe in the

mid-1930s into a medium bomber.

 

Also

 

Today Gerhard Krems is the last man alive to have flown a Dornier. He

was a much-decorated pilot who flew 250 bombing missions between 1940

and 1944 - 39 of them during the Battle of Britain.

Most of his service was in Heinkels, but he started out

flying Dorniers. "Part of the far-reconnaissance training was

low-altitude flying," he told me as we leafed through his photographs of

the war in his flat in Berlin.

"And the Dornier 17 was the best plane for low flying. You

could fly really close to the ground. That's me flying one. You can see

how low I am. The tree-tops are above me."

He remembers the Dornier as a very fine plane.

"It made a fantastic impression on me in comparison to the

other planes. It looked somehow different, and I only later realised

why. It was agile, it was very slender and it was elegant, really

elegant. But you only realised quite how elegant when you saw it in the

sky. It quickly got a very suitable nickname, der fliegende bleistift - the flying pencil."

 

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I'd be surprised if they can get it up intact. It must be extremely fragile being in shallow water. had it been in a cold, deep, more anaerobic environment the chances would be a lot better. Neat find though.

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