January 1, 2009 at 8:56 am
Happy New Year
I thought it would be nice to find out more about this Australian aircraft designer and in particular more about Percival Aircraft Ltd.
I am wondering what happened to the company after World War 2.
cheers
By: Proctor VH-AHY - 2nd January 2009 at 12:19
Mark
I forwarded your photo on to a friend and received a reply which contained the following:
“I remember this – I was there at the time, Wodonga, November 1976! Quite an occasion – but no trilby! I was still in my teens”
quite a co-incidence I think. (I have de-identified the reply – no names no pack drill!)
cheers
Ross
By: mark_pilkington - 2nd January 2009 at 10:59
Maurice is completing his DH89 Rapide which is about 6 months away from completion, I expect he will then move to the Proctor which is stored in the same hangar.
Regards
Mark Pilkington
By: Proctor VH-AHY - 2nd January 2009 at 10:24
Mark
Thanks for the info, another question, is VH-UXS under active restoration?
cheers
Ross
By: mark_pilkington - 2nd January 2009 at 08:57
,
Ross
Yes VH-BQA is Leigh Giles project, originally carried the registration VH-ACA and was formerly owned by Lord Casey, BQA is a subsequent registration, not a current registration or reservation.
VH-UXS is the current registration of Maurice Rolfes Proctor restoration, formerly VH-DUL.
Regards
Mark Pilkington
By: Proctor VH-AHY - 2nd January 2009 at 08:38
Ron
That’s a great photo and VH-CCM belongs to a friend of mine. Pity I don’t have his email.
Mark
I am interested in the Under Restoration
Vega Gull II VH-BQA
Proctor I VH-UXS
strangly enough, I am completely familar with the restoration of VH-AHY. Is VH-BQA the one Leigh has? and did it once belong to Lord Casey?
cheers
Ross
By: Ron Cuskelly - 2nd January 2009 at 07:50
This is Edgar Percival posing with Gull VI VH-CCM at Wodonga on 6 Nov 1976.

By: mark_pilkington - 2nd January 2009 at 06:35
.
VH-EPN is a complete example formerly with the Drage Airworld collection at Wangaratta, now privately owned and under restoration by Todd Miller in Victoria.
c/n 28 VH-EPN ex- VH-DAI/SSC/SSV ex-G-APBR under restoration Victoria, Australia
The fuselage of a second is displayed in “quasi” Army scheme in Lincoln Nitschke’s collection in South Australia
c/n 46 ex- VH-SSR ex- VH-DAV fuselage only Lincoln Nitschke Aviation Museum, Greenock, Australia
2 out of the 9 world wide survivors in Australia, 7 complete, 2 fuselages (4 currently airworthy).
It seems a reasonable effort to acknowledge Edgar Percival.
I understand he did the design of the EP-9, it being the first product of his “new” company Edgar Percival Aircraft Limited after he had sold and left the Percival Aircraft Company to Hunting, although Australia holds a few other notable Percival products including:
Flying
Gull IV VH-UTP
Gull VI VH-CCM
Under Restoration
Vega Gull II VH-BQA
Proctor I VH-UXS
Proctor I VH-AHY
Static Display
Gull VI G-AERD
Proctor I VH-FEP
Proctor I VH-AUC
Proctor 2 VH-BQR
Proctor 2 VH-AVG
Proctor 5 VH-BCM
The Gulls & Proctors probably being the better memorial to his sleek pre-war designs, that he was best known for.
Regards
Mark Pilkington
By: Proctor VH-AHY - 2nd January 2009 at 01:20
When chasing the drawings for the Proctor, I was told that Percival Aircraft was sold to another english aircraft manufacturing company and the owner of that company hated Edgar and ordered that the drawings be destroyed
I can’t remember where I heard it, does anyone else recall hearing a story along those lines?
What sources of Percival Aircraft Drawings are there, any in the UK?
Who is restoring VH-EPN?
cheers
By: JDK - 1st January 2009 at 22:25
Does an EP.9 have a place on display in Australia to honour the man or was he in the background in terms of design by then?
Well, there’s one under restoration, VH-EPN, and another fuselage in Australia, according to Wikipedia.
By: David Burke - 1st January 2009 at 22:18
Does an EP.9 have a place on display in Australia to honour the man or was he in the background in terms of design by then?
By: JDK - 1st January 2009 at 22:16
The National museum of Australia has a substantial collection of his trophies and memorabilia, and papers, as well as Gull 6 G-AERD.
http://www.nma.gov.au/collections-search/display?irn=34445
A search under Edgar Percival nets most of the material, including many examples of ‘Display stand for a small scale model of an aeroplane’ for which the full record is ‘a display stand for a small scale model of an aeroplane’, no image available. Nice cataloguing. :rolleyes:
The Silverster book is well worth tracking down.
By: G-ORDY - 1st January 2009 at 12:36
Edgar Percival
Prickly guy – I remember the tingle that ran down my spine when I came home from work one evening and my wife said “An old gentleman has been on the phone for you” – yep, none other than EWP himself, after a copy of “Vintage Aircraft” magazine in which I’d published a photo of the prototype Gull under construction at Lowe-Wylde’s workshop in Maidstone!
I’ve scanned his obit from The Times for you:
By: G-ASEA - 1st January 2009 at 11:17
There is another good book on Percival’s called ‘Percival and Hunting Aircraft’ by John Silvester
By: Arabella-Cox - 1st January 2009 at 09:46
They were taken over by Hunting and Son Ltd in 1944.
The company history is covered in “Percival’s Aircraft” by Norman H Ellison, published by Chalford Publishing Company in 1997 in their Archive Photographs series
Happy New Year
Ralph