oversize wing bolt plate
Mark
For the uneducated among us, could you explain a little? 🙂
His next recollection is waking up in a German hospital being offered a cigarette by the guy that shot him down. He’s still with us….
A very good friend of mine had a similar experience when he cartwheeled his P-51 into the Seine whilst attacking a German boat ferrying troops across the river. Woke up in a German run hospital 6 hours later.
I Look forward to seeing an RAF marked Mustang!
Just to stick my tuppence worth in, I have just spoken to Doug Reich, who flew Mustang 1 and 1A’s with II(AC) Squadron at Sawbridgeworth. He states that none of their aircraft had spade grips fitted.
Matching Green
391st Bomb Group (M) 1944 and the same view in 2010 merged.
The road was part of the original hardstand cluster in the original photograph, and the view is looking toward the Officers site at Rookwood Hall Farm in the far distance.

Definately.
Thanks, there’s more to come from, and of, ATC SM, but my filing system is as erratic as BL Maxi in a rainstorm!
Wish I had Denis’ imagination and skills!
I’m not that talented :p , just basic layering in a free program called paint.net.
The real art is finding the images and working out exactly where the original was taken.
The one of the Mosquito on its hardstand took 78 takes using a 35mm lens to arrive at the more or less exact spot. The blister hangar was easier as there is a prominent tree on the far horizon that is still there, just 12 takes for that one.
I look forward to more images being displayed, a great thread so far..and not a buried spitfire in sight;)
Not quite then and now, but two from Hunsdon that I managed to create from old IWM images and the exact locations now morphed together.


Former Station 166 USAAF Matching Essex


My own site regarding RAF Hunsdon, RAF Sawbridgeworth, and USAAF Matching Green.
http://www.wartime-airfields.com
‘Preservation’ of historic airfields in Britain is virtually non existant apart from a few control towers/watch offices tucked away in the middle of what are now industrial sites
Some of us can only preserve the history and the memory of airfields, not the infrastructure. We have tried by documenting the history and by building memorials on two previously unmarked airfields in Hertfordshire, we can but try in our own ways!
Janie,
Some parts relating to the B-26 Marauders from Chipping Ongar went to the Coalhouse Fort museum, no idea about the rest of the exhibits.
….Very ..thought provoking.
thanks for posting.
Thanks for the info.
Yes, nothing can have you running from the sink or kicking the cat down the stairs faster than a Merlin overhead!
More so when its fitted to a Hurricane:p
Peter Teichmans P-51 ‘Jumping Jacques’ has a blue tail with a yellow motif if that helps?
Agreed in part, ‘Milestones’ does seem to me a little hap-hazard in respect Undoubtably some of the aircraft did represent a forward leap in technology but does a Me262 and the F-35 have to be in there with them? why not aircraft that represented a British leap forward as they have with the Meteor and the Mosquito. Surely a repaint of the Tempest and the Mustang into RAF markings provided they dont already carry original markings of course.
I have never really understood how many of the exhibits are laid out within the entire museum. With respect to type, then the likes of the B-17, Mustang ect are Bona fide subjects. but in US markings? Would it would be better to display them in squadron markings that operated the types? 90,220,214,223 all operated the Fortress. But with only about eighty G models, the Fortress III in RAF parlance, eventually in service, would that number warrant a repaint of Hendons example?
Would Hendon warrant being a true RAF museum of types operated by them. Other examples moved in from other museums on loan, while the non RAF marked examples moved out?
All food for thought and debate!
Thats proberly why i’m not a great lover of Spitfires. Its a nice aeroplane and like to see them. but I cant understand why people rave over them. Think I might get shot now!
Dave
You are not alone, Only prints and paintings of Hawker Hurricanes hang on the stairwell, To me they just look the part. My ears finely tuned to the sound of Peter Teichmans Hurricane based just a few miles away, I never dash out in the garden to look at anything else.
30 Hurricanes under the ground in Burma might have raised an interest with me!
Link not working Jim!