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Smoked the last cig?
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n check this shit out...
WWII.Air.Crash.Detectives.S01E04.DVDRip.x264-CBFD
Genre .............: Documentary / History
Duration ..........: 44mn 24s
Size ..............: 322 MiB
Quality ...........: x264 PAL 25.000 FPS / 860 Kbps
Source ............: DVD (RETAiL)
Settings ..........: --preset slower --crf 19
Resolution ........: 718x404
Audio .............: AAC 2.0
Bitrate ...........: 48.0 KHz / 153 Kbps
iNFO: https://shop.abc.net.au/products/wwii-air-crash-detectives-2dvd
Proof On Ep 1.
From 1939 to 1945 thousands of young airmen met terrible ends not at the
hands the enemy s machine guns or because of the murderous flak of
anti-aircraft fire, but in catastrophic accidents and training crashes.
Incredibly, these incidents accounted for the lives of over 8,000 men.
All over the world training flights and cargo transport journeys all
sometimes ended in disaster.
Perhaps it s not so surprising that, amid the weight of the human costs
of the air war against Germany, these hidden losses have been forgotten;
but all the men in the aircraft which never returned signed up for the
same war, and they were all someone s father, brother or son. The same
letters went home to every family.
Luckily, there are some who believe those brave men should not be a
footnote in military history. They are the World War 2 air crash detectives
and now, for the first time, they have agreed to let us join them.
Episode 4: The Turweston Crash: Death In The Moonlight
In the early hours of 8th July 1944, a normally quiet part of rural
Northamptonshire was a hive of activity as the 17 twinned engine Wellington
bombers rumbled down the runway of their Turweston airfield home. With the
Allied D-Day invasion having taken place the previous month, these young
trainees were conducting a night-time flying exercise as part of their
readiness to enter frontline bombing service for the RAF.
With a bright full moon lighting up his fellow circling bombers in the night s
sky, the Wellington of Pilot Officer Searles and his six strong crew took to
the air. As they climbed into the inky darkness a fireball erupted. Searle s
Wellington had collided with another, and the two bombers crashed to the
ground in flames. Both crews were killed instantly. 13 young men had died
before their war had even begun Garth Barnard strives to find out what
caused the mid-air collision by reviewing eye-witness accounts, official
reports, computer simulations and his own theories.
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