Monday, February 8, 2010

Ww2 Aircraft Parts WW2 Aircraft Part - How Much Is It Worth?

WW2 Aircraft Part - How much is it worth? - ww2 aircraft parts

I have a piece of the tail of World War II German Messerschmitt 109 fighter plane, shot down over Devon, at 1941-42. It is true that the man who was the only rider to each prisoner!

The flap of the tail has no "skin" to the structure of the naked air, titanium, and there is mold in this section at all. There is also a green frame structure of the air and the link where it is used in the air a bit rusty. About all that is in good condition for its age but is a little damaged by the impact, but the shape is almost intact.

Any idea of value?

5 comments:

calnicke... said...

It is likely that only a framework of steel pipe. Are covered with fabric and fabric disintegrates with time.

It would be a good addition to a museum, but actually do these things, so as not to "sale value". Operation, and the planes that are useful would be appropriate, but there are a lot of junk circulating air.

I suggest a donation to a museum with history. You could write a tax credit, which would tend to fall ..

Jay said...

Take a look on E-Bay, there are many objects in the Second World War and links to the people who are better than what you informed here. The chances are probably not much, except for a collector or someone like the family of the man who captured the pilot.

It would be interesting to do a little research and see if I could find about the incident. I think the ME 109 was shot down, while accompanying an attack against a convoy of Plymouth or the navigation on the Canal.

Wired up said...

Depends on whether the trip was a German pilot, I took a few pages in ME109 had losses of all German fighters. It might be worth only scrap to see if you can be a reference to the number of aircraft that flew with him still require a little research, the original driver or his family as a souvenir, buy the Cross nio doubt the pilot sent the rest of the war as a prisoner of war in Britain that is your starting point.

Timbo is here said...

It is titanium - not in the plane was used at the time, or titanium, not WW2.

It has no value because there is no market for these things. There are many pieces that should make as in museums throughout Europe and make a donation if you have another.

vlf126 said...

His uncle is .. Worthless their part of the story of a world war to try a value on what is going wrong .. share to another person or transferred to a museum .. I would try, their history, will find a number of aircraft and the pilot's name and perhaps .. to the parents of the pilots who flew them, and I bet he had something from someone who was a part of his family like .. modified Regards, Steve

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