September 19, 2013 at 5:19 pm
Have a guess why it was there?
By: G-ORDY - 24th September 2013 at 21:20
Lovely shot G-ORDY, Mildenhall was it?
Yep
By: 92fis - 23rd September 2013 at 18:14
Lovely shot G-ORDY, Mildenhall was it?
By: Beaufighter VI - 21st September 2013 at 23:38
I cannot remember in detail but I suspect an RAF Police guard was placed on it overnight as that part of Woodhall had no security, that was their hidey hole. BBMF had one of the hangars for storage and there was an engine bay for the Phantoms.
No gliding at that time.
By: 92fis - 21st September 2013 at 19:46
Just a guess, I didn’t know about that incident. What was the caravan for behind it? Was Woodhall Spa in use for gliding at that time?
By: Beaufighter VI - 20th September 2013 at 21:29
Woodhall Spa?
You have it 92fis!
June 1981 PM631 suffered an engine failure during a display over Woodhall Spa village. Quick thinking by the pilot allowed a dead stick landing on a taxi track on the old airfield at Woodhall Spa. The aircraft was tied down over night, hence the concrete blocks, dismantled and trucked back to Coningsby. This was the beginning of the end for the Griffon 66 power plants installed in the Flight’s aircraft. I think this engine had done 700 hours, twice the original war time life. Rolls Royce were tasked with manufacturing a single shaft reduction gearbox and other modifications to the supercharger casing to allow the Shackleton Griffon 57/58 to be fitted to the Spitfire XIX and XIV.
By: David Burke - 20th September 2013 at 21:18
West Raynham
By: Roobarb - 20th September 2013 at 20:59
Bradwell Bay.
By: gillman32 - 20th September 2013 at 20:33
Have a guess why it was there?
Engine trouble, Kenley?
By: 92fis - 20th September 2013 at 20:07
Woodhall Spa?
By: 92fis - 20th September 2013 at 19:02
When you said close to home, did you mean present home or their home at the time?
By: Black Knight - 20th September 2013 at 18:55
Barkston Heath???
By: Beaufighter VI - 20th September 2013 at 17:49
Mosquito’s operated from this airfield until the end of the war. Did BBMF let grass grow under their feet?
By: Ollie1 - 20th September 2013 at 16:54
I will guess RAF Cranwell North grass runway. The mobile control trailer may be there from the gliders. PM631 does look to have been performing high powered engine runs. So did she encounter a problem and put down? Early 1980s?
By: DazDaMan - 20th September 2013 at 13:55
A Mk XIX with a 4 bladed prop?
It’s the angle of the prop making it look like there’s only four blades.
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By: Bruce - 20th September 2013 at 12:09
The ‘scissor jack’ you are seeing is a standard RAF chock.
By: Dave Homewood - 20th September 2013 at 11:46
Is that a camera tripod on the far side of the aircraft, seen just forward of the wing?
And a scissor jack near the wheel maybe?
By: Black Knight - 20th September 2013 at 11:45
That was PS853 & was iirc early 60’s.
This is PM631 & again iirc wore those codes from after filming of the Battle Of Britain film.
By: DragonRapide - 20th September 2013 at 11:36
Random thought – was it around this time that one of the Spits was engaged in mock combat with a Lightning?
I can’t remember who we thought we might be tangling with…..
Doesn’t explain much about the photo, mind!
By: Bruce - 20th September 2013 at 11:09
A Mk XIX with a 4 bladed prop? Tie downs to 120kg of building blocks? 2050 HP? I am not convinced.
It is a Mk XIX – I promise you.
It is PM631 – there are plenty of pictures of it in this scheme in the 1970’s with BBMF.
The OP was Chiefy at BBMF at the time.
The wing tie downs are less important than the tail one, but tell a story.
I’m thinking that perhaps it had a forced landing close to Coltishall (plenty to choose from round there), and it is shown about to undergo a ground run before being flown out.