Mt Yale P-38 crash site

TRs for the San Gabriel Mountains.
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dima
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Joined: Wed Feb 12, 2014 1:35 am
Location: Los Angeles

Post by dima »

Today I went back to look for the P-38 that went down in 1944 below Mt Yale and Mt Harvard (Mt Wilson area). This was my 5th trip to find this thing, which is a bit ridiculous. The first 3 times I went to look for this thing were back in 2016. I only found a few parts, and some evidence of a salvage operation. So I assumed that the site was picked clean, and moved on with my life. Recently I stumbled on somebody else's photos that showed a more extensive crash site, so clearly there was much more to find. The 4th trip was a few weeks ago. It was a day where nothing went right, and the trip was cut short, and ended at the hospital. I kinda liked the search plan, though, so today I came back to check out the area I planned to search the last time.

I drove to Mt Wilson, biked down the toll road, and stashed the bike near the switchback SW of Mt Yale. Then I traversed N on foot. The idea was to stay at the 4200ft contour (as mentioned in one of Pat Macha's books). Previously I was above that level. The whole thing is a steep slope with lots of brush. Initially it's open enough such that you can make progress reasonably quickly, even though there's lots of poison oak. Then you hit a big gully (Harvard branch of Eaton Canyon), and past that the brush is much thicker. It was really slow going, and kinda unpleasant. Eventually I decided that I was far enough, and that it wasn't supposed to be this much of a pain in the ass. I took a break at my turnaround point

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Yeah. Time for a plan B. I did find a few scattered things in 2016, and even though I looked around the area back then (3 different times!) it still made the most sense that the crash site would be close to where I found the parts. So I turned around, and headed back at a higher elevation. And when approaching the previously-found parts, I found the full crash site immediately; no searching required. What's the opposite of beginner's luck?

There's a LOT of stuff here. Full set of photos is on my server. There's lots of honeycomb-like material:

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Each tube here is pretty long, so this maybe isn't structural? Some sort of cooling thing, maybe? Lots more brake disks:

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This one is noteworthy because the tree at the bottom-right of the photo is growing through it. This was here for a while. Lots of stuff:

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There're lots of various body parts, with some looking beefier than others:

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Some of this was armored? Stuff, some with part numbers:

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More "cooling" stuff?

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Getting close to the engine?

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Ah yes. Crankshaft:

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The other one is off to the side

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Landing gear:

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There was a very beat-up antler sitting among the parts, so I was able to bring home SOME souvenir:

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Rather than fight the brush, I climbed a rocky gully just S of the crash site all the way to the ridge. This still had some brush, and was somewhat technical, and involved extra gain, but it still saved lots of time. Eventually I was on the ridge:

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As I was climbing up, a bird was repeatedly dive-bombing into the canyon next to me. It was impressively loud. Here he is, looking for dinner:

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He never crashed, so I didn't have to go find him too.
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HikeUp
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Joined: Thu Sep 27, 2007 9:21 pm

Post by HikeUp »

These are the best pics I've seen of the site. I briefly looked (unsuccessfully) back in '08 when the place was covered in snow.

Looking up ridge towards Yale...Harvard in background on left...
IMG_0057.jpg

Hospital?
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Sean
Cucamonga
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Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2011 12:32 pm

Post by Sean »

Thanks for the report and pics. Good job! The opposite of beginner's luck is expert's misfortune. But, hey, at least you got some extra exercise.
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tekewin
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Joined: Thu Apr 11, 2013 5:07 pm

Post by tekewin »

Looks like hard work, but you found a ton of stuff. Nice!
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