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WWII Buffalo LVT recovered after 74 years underground

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  • adt70hk
    SMF Supporters
    • Sep 2019
    • 10400

    #1

    WWII Buffalo LVT recovered after 74 years underground

    Just found this on the BBC.....it looks in remarkably good nick all things considered......

    ATB.

    Andrew

    The craft is in "fantastic" condition despite its subterranean stay says the man behind the dig.
  • Guest

    #2
    More photos here:
    The 26ft-long Buffalo military tank was excavated by a team of volunteers who spent five days digging the lands beneath the Cambridgeshire Fens.

    It’s a fairly (but not very) early LVT (4), without a bow machine gun but with the hatches in the roof staggered instead of both being equally far forward. It also has the mounting for the 20 mm Polsten gun still on the roof.

    Comment

    • Tim Marlow
      SMF Supporters
      • Apr 2018
      • 18889
      • Tim
      • Somerset UK

      #3
      Reading the report it sounds like there are three others around there somewhere?

      Comment

      • adt70hk
        SMF Supporters
        • Sep 2019
        • 10400

        #4
        Originally posted by Tim Marlow
        Reading the report it sounds like there are three others around there somewhere?
        Indeed.

        Comment

        • JR
          • May 2015
          • 18273

          #5
          Thanks Andrew, nice to see the photos, esp the recovery vehicles.One looked to be ex army .

          Comment

          • adt70hk
            SMF Supporters
            • Sep 2019
            • 10400

            #6
            Originally posted by John Race
            Thanks Andrew, nice to see the photos, esp the recovery vehicles.One looked to be ex army .
            John,

            No problem at all.

            Couldn't believe how good a condition it came out in and no obvious large amounts of rust.

            Can only assume that being buried reduced the amount of oxygen it was exposed to and so reduced the amount of rust.

            ATB.

            Andrew

            Comment

            • Guest

              #7
              On another forum where I posted a link to this story, someone found a clip that shows why these LVTs are there:



              They were apparently used to repair a dyke that had broken, by being put into the gap and covered over.

              Comment

              • adt70hk
                SMF Supporters
                • Sep 2019
                • 10400

                #8
                Originally posted by Jakko
                On another forum where I posted a link to this story, someone found a clip that shows why these LVTs are there:



                They were apparently used to repair a dyke that had broken, by being put into the gap and covered over.
                Thanks Jakko. Read it was to do it with flood defences but hadn't seen this. Thanks for posting.

                Comment

                • GerryW
                  • Feb 2021
                  • 1757

                  #9
                  Just had this on the local news - think the family were a bit peeved that I knew what it was all about!

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