Hunter David Cundall given green light to excavate at Yangon International Airport near Rangoon
A new dig for the Birmingham Spitfires which are rumoured to be buried in Burma was beginning today.
Spitfire hunter David Cundall has finally been given the green light to start the fresh excavation work after weeks of frustrating delays.
Supported by Staffordshire-based JCB, a special hydraulic hammer was being used to smash through a layer of concrete near a perimeter fence at Yangon International Airport near Rangoon.
“Things are moving at last,” said 64-year-old Mr Cundall.
He has been on a 17-year Indiana Jones-style quest to try to find the World War Two fighters.
Legend has it that a batch of Castle Bromwich-built Spitfires, which were shipped to Burma but never flew, were buried in their crates before Allied troops returned home.
Mr Cundall believes he has located the planes but an initial dig 12 months ago ended in bitter disappointment when it was halted by airport officials amid fears that sensitive infrastructure was being damaged.
Mr Cundall said JCB had flown representatives and equipment out to Burma to help with the dig.
They were using a hydraulic hammer to break up a “thick layer of concrete” that covers the location of a wooden crate identified underground.
Mr Cundall hopes to discover one of the iconic aircraft sealed inside the box.
He then plans to move on to dig in another location where recent hi-tech surveys have identified “at least” 12 large metal objects buried at several metres deep and up to 30 metres long.
And he has promised that, if salvageable, he will put one of the Spitfires on display in Birmingham.
Mr Cundall said: “We hope to do a bore hole and then use a bore hole camera to see into the box.”
The green light to dig again follows new evidence coming to light which included a drawing of where eye witnesses testify to seeing or helping to bury up to 12 Spitfires near a railway track in Myitkyina.
It tallied exactly with the location of Mr Cundall’s hi-tech tomography investigations which located “at least” 12 large objects – believed to be Spitfires – buried at several metres deep.
He thinks the crates of boxed-up Spitfires – which never flew in action – were lifted straight from a train and into a carved out trench.
http://www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/mi ... es-6776986