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  1. 28 de jun. de 2018 · Flight 19 exercise was led by Lt. Charles C. Taylor, a veteran of the Pacific theater of World War II who had flown far more harrowing missions than a practice flight over the Bahamas. A little after 2:30 PM, Taylor radioed base to report, “Both my compasses are out and I’m trying to find Ft. Lauderdale, Florida…

  2. Flight 19 turned and began to make its way toward the second leg of its exercise, and things took a turn for the strange. A radio message was intercepted from the flight at around 1600 hours, recording a conversation likely between Taylor and the pilot of one of the other planes.

  3. 19 de nov. de 2021 · A pair of PBM Mariner flying boats were sent to search for the missing Flight 19 around 7:30 p.m., according to History. And that's where the story gets even eerier. Just 20 minutes after takeoff, the PBM Mariner rescue seaplane disappeared from the radar, never to be seen again. It is believed that the plane, which was a model notorious for ...

  4. Flight 19 war die Bezeichnung für eine aus fünf Torpedobombern vom Typ TBF Avenger der US Navy bestehende Trainingseinheit, die am 5. Dezember 1945 vor der Ostküste Floridas verschwand. Der Flugunfall erlangte bleibende Bedeutung dadurch, dass es unter Anhängern der Theorie des Bermudadreiecks als am besten dokumentierter Vorfall in der Geschichte des Dreiecks gilt.

  5. www.history.navy.mil › flight-19-lost-patrolLost Patrol - NHHC

    7 de nov. de 2017 · Naval Aviation News June 1973, 8-16. By Michael McDonell At 1410 on 5 December 1945, five TBM Avengers comprising Flight 19 rose into the sunny sky above NAS Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Turning east the formation headed out over the Atlantic on the first leg of a routine exercise from which neither the 14 men of Flight 19 nor the 13-man crew of a PBM Mariner sent out to search for them were ever to ...

  6. 7 de ene. de 2021 · The flight officer quickly understood that if Flight 19 had flown the first leg of the mission correctly, it was not time-distance feasible to have been over the Florida Keys. The flight officer notified ASRTU-4 to instruct the flight to proceed on course 270-degrees or toward the sun (this was also standard procedure for any lost aircraft from NAS Fort Lauderdale – in the afternoon).

  7. Escadrille 19. La disparition de l'escadrille 19, le 5 décembre 1945 au-dessus de l'Atlantique, concerne une patrouille de 5 avions torpilleurs TBM Avenger de l' US Navy, d'indicatif Flight 19 (vol 19), qui effectuait un vol d'entraînement depuis la base aéronavale de Fort Lauderdale, en Floride. Les 14 pilotes et membres d'équipage de l ...