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Missing 32" Enterprise finally found...

Okay, now we know Steve Austin's most photogenic lifting body, the HL-10, was smashed upside down recently. I am an aggrieved Klingon commander. :klingon:

Our 11-footer has been through a lifetime of ups and downs, but in its current state of restoration, it is fantastic— and fully honored by the nation.

The shuttlecraft mockup was left outdoors to rot, which it did very thoroughly, and although it has been handsomely restored, the only original parts left are the steel inner skeleton and the engine pods.

The 33-inch Enterprise seen whooshing by in the main titles of every episode was stolen, stored improperly for decades, and appears to be a mess. We know that now.

Here is what I consider good news, as recently as I know it: George Barris took loving care of the One True Batmobile until he finally let it go in 2013. The car was 58 years old at the time, and it still looked new:
https://www.autoweek.com/car-life/a1915151/original-batmobile-sells-46-million-barrett-jackson/

I just wish Barris would have given it to the Smithsonian. They would have accepted it, too. It would draw visitors at least as well as the 11-footer.
 
Okay, now we know Steve Austin's most photogenic lifting body, the HL-10, was smashed upside down recently. I am an aggrieved Klingon commander. :klingon: . . .

.

Just for the record, it was not recently, the fall happened back in the late 1980's. They did a good job of keeping it quiet, it's almost impossible to find any information on it. I do have a video someplace showing the HL-10 before and during the repair after the fall but the HL-10 was never the same afterwards, the forward clear sphere was totally different and the skin was painted, not the unfinished, shiny aluminum it was before the accident. I am sure there are other differences that I just can't remember at the moment.
 
Guys, it's one thing to change the subject, but Star Wars isn't something to be discussed in the original series forum. Take that elsewhere please. This is the TOS forum.

Thank you.
ok, so we can talk about the 6 Million Dollar Man, The Batmobile, in a "the TOS" (call the Redundant Department of Redundancy) thred but Star Wars is off limits.

Some day I hope to understand an admin's mind
 
The point is just that for a lot of the country LA is significantly more convenient and it seems silly to put both models in Washington rather than having one at the other side of the country.

Driving 2 to 3 days each way does have some charms, but I wouldn't call it convenient compared to a flight. But then, I don't sleep well the first night in a strange hotel.

The models were conceived, built, and used in LA.

How do you feel about the space shuttle orbiters? Should all four have been lined up at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, probably at the Udvar-Hazy Center in Virginia, and none for New York, Kennedy Space Center, or the West Coast?
 
How do you feel about the space shuttle orbiters? Should all four have been lined up at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, probably at the Udvar-Hazy Center in Virginia, and none for New York, Kennedy Space Center, or the West Coast?
I feel that it's a real crime that there isn't one in Texas.
 
Just for the record, it was not recently, the fall happened back in the late 1980's. They did a good job of keeping it quiet, it's almost impossible to find any information on it. I do have a video someplace showing the HL-10 before and during the repair after the fall but the HL-10 was never the same afterwards, the forward clear sphere was totally different and the skin was painted, not the unfinished, shiny aluminum it was before the accident. I am sure there are other differences that I just can't remember at the moment.

So they could rebuild it, but they didn't make it better, stronger, or faster?
 
As fun as this is, there is a credible argument that there should be more museums for this stuff in L.A. Film and television in general. Maybe there is a lot and I just don't know it.
 
Here is what I consider good news, as recently as I know it: George Barris took loving care of the One True Batmobile until he finally let it go in 2013. The car was 58 years old at the time, and it still looked new:
https://www.autoweek.com/car-life/a1915151/original-batmobile-sells-46-million-barrett-jackson/

For the record, when the #1 1966 Batmobile was sold then it was in pretty bad shape. It since has been sold again privately and the current owner has spared no expense to restore it to the way it looked on screen in season #1 of Batman, interior and exterior.
 
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