Those Guatemala caves must be open pits? Or caves without roofs. I have seen 
P51s fly over while caving in Carta Valley before. Actually, we were looking 
for caves. Because if we were, tevhnically caving, unless the rock was 
transperant, we wouldn,t have seen them.of course, with the improvements in LED 
Media Wall technology; it would be possible to line the ceiling of a cave with 
an LED mesh...and then place cameras on the surface to capture what flys 
over...or capture images, so you know if its raining or when it gets dark 
outside. You could even add a satellite dish so you could catch the latest 
Desparate Housewives episode or watch the tu longhorns play. Of course....these 
images are very grainy...so it would need to be a large room. Which leads one 
to wonder why you couldn,t just line all the walls, floor and ceilings with 
LEDs? Then you could play one of those Lechugilla 360 dvds and it would be 
almost like the real thing. But if you wanted to see
 the planes fly over in this scenario...you might have to add it in with 
photoshop or animate it.

Allan B. Cobb wrote: 
>  > Strictly an 
> opinion but as the DC3 is obsolete, 3% ain’t bad. My first commercial 
>  > flight was on a 
> DC3 from Bryan/College Station to Houston 
>  > while attending 
>  Allen 
>  Academy in about 1950. 
>    
>  I rode on a DC-3 on a flight between Cozumel and 
> Cancun back in 1983.  The starboard engine was smoking really badly but we 
> made it OK.  There is still one sitting at the airport in Guatemala 
> City.  It has moved around over the years but I don't know if they still 
> fly it.  The Guatemalan air force has some P-51 Mustangs that it still 
> flies.  I see them when I go to Guatemala for caving.  (Just to make 
> this caving related.)


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