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*[http://starbulletin.com/2005/06/14/features/story1.html Honolulu Star-Bulletin] - June 14, 2005 - Photos and information on Thompson's Aviation Warehouse and Doug Scroggins of [http://www.scrogginsaviation.com/ Scroggins Aviation]
 
*[http://starbulletin.com/2005/06/14/features/story1.html Honolulu Star-Bulletin] - June 14, 2005 - Photos and information on Thompson's Aviation Warehouse and Doug Scroggins of [http://www.scrogginsaviation.com/ Scroggins Aviation]
 
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Revision as of 11:57, 27 June 2009

The Lockheed L-1011 TriStar

NASA's Lockheed L-1011 TriStar diagram.

Lockheedfuselage

Lost's Lockheed L-1011 film prop in its storage location behind Dillingham Airfield in Hawaii.

P9100001b

The nose piece of the Lockheed L-1011 prop at the He'eia Kea storage lot near Kaneohe, HI.

The Lockheed L-1011 TriStar is a wide-body passenger jet manufactured between 1968 and 1984. Parts of a Lockheed L-1011 are used to represent the wreckage of Oceanic Flight 815 on Lost.

Notes

  • Flight 815 is a Boeing 777.
  • Flight 815's interior scenes are neither a L-1011 nor a Boeing 777.
  • While in service, this airplane amassed 28,822 landings and 58,841 flight-hours.
  • Chronology: The L-1011 aircraft used in Lost:
  1. Was production model 1009
  2. Was the 9th L1011 built and first flew June 12, 1972.
  3. Was originally delivered to Eastern Airlines as N308EA.
  4. Was stored in the Mojave Desert (likely MHV) in 1991 (Google Maps)
  5. Was purchased seven months later by Delta Airlines, who re-registered it as N783DL
    1. Delta flew the plane for six and a half years, then stored it in Victorville (Southern California Logistics Airport, (Google Maps)), then in the Mojave Desert again
  6. Was purchased by Aviation Warehouse, an aviation props company for television and film. (Google Maps)
  7. Was sold to Lost

Storage

The fuselage props are stored in two locations. The nose piece is stored in a lot by the highway in Heeia Kea, HI (Covered nose section seen on Google Maps). The rest of the fuselage, including the middle section, is stored in a lot behind Dillingham Airfield in Waialua, HI, which is only minutes away from the wreckage filming location at Mokuleia Beach. The Beechcraft fuselage that depicted the Drug smugglers' plane is also stored in the same lot at Dillingham Airfield (storage location on Google Maps).

ExposeCrashShoot

Behind the scenes of the shooting of "Exposé", as seen in the Season 3 DVD bonus material.

According to the April 5, 2007 podcast, line producer Jean Higgins had been asking Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse for about two years whether the Lockheed L-1011 body representing the main fuselage could be "thrown away" after the survivors had left their original beach camp in "Whatever the Case May Be". However, Damon and Carlton had insisted that they might still have use for it one day, and thus felt vindicated once "Exposé" came along. Oddly enough, however, the main fuselage body is nowhere to be seen in the "Lost: On Location" featurette for the episode on the Season 3 DVD bonus disc.

The tail section of the plane, meanwhile, was broken off before the rest of the plane was transported to Oahu [1] and is presumably still residing in Mojave[2]. The tail section of Oceanic Flight 815 seen in "The Other 48 Days" and "A Tale of Two Cities" was completely created via CGI in both instances.

External links