Bermuda Triangle: Five American Navy planes never found

On December 5, 1945, five US Navy bombers, widely known as Flight 19, left Fort Lauderdale for a mission that should just be routine training exercise. Airplanes involved in training were conducted by two to three experienced military men. The Training Mission They [...]
Training Mission

They rose to the sky shortly after 2 pm, and headed east over <x0Hens and Chicken Shoals”, where they intended to land with their cargo. Then they would return from the north, to the Grand Bahamas Island, and eventually fly northwest, back to their base in Florida, finishing a triangle-shaped road.
The first route over Hens and Chicken Shoals went as planned, but soon something strange happened.
The implementation of Flight 19 was directed by Lt. Charles C. Taylor, a World War II veteran. Shortly after 2:30, Taylor got the radio to report, my two compasses don't work, and I'm trying to find Ft. Lauderdale, Florida ... I'm sure I'm over Keyes, but I don't know how far. ”
Taylor was not the first pilot to have inexplicable problems with equipment on that particular part of the ocean. Some 450 years ago, when Christopher Columbus was sailing the same area, he noticed that his crew was experiencing irregular readings “of the compass”.
Flight 19 disappeared. /All that's interesting-Bota.al











