VH-AXT de
Havilland D.H.82A Tiger Moth (c/n DHA404)
I have lost the provenance of this photograph,
so I cannot reveal the venue, date or just who the
two blokes were. It is thought to be
Essendon, circa 1949. This
wasn't even the first VH-AXT
either. The
first was a DC-3 that went to the Commonwealth Bank of
Australia who re-registered
it
VH-CBA. This VH-AXT was ex A17-369 and had orignally
been allocated the registration
VH-AXO. For some
inexplicable reason that was not taken
up. Also, equally inexplicably, all
the original VH-AX series (mostly
Tiger Moths) were
re-registered VH-BX-
between 1949 and
1951. Consequently the
above
machine wound
up as VH-BXT in April of 1951. The official
reason given by DCA for not
keeping the VH-AX- series was that they could have been confused
with Q codes and International
emergency codes. (Seems to be a bit overly cautious, but there
you are).
Seen
below is a shot from the Aaron Betts collection of an accident
sustained by -AXT probably
in the late 1940s. Clearly it was
repaired, since the machine later went on to serve with the
Royal
Victorian Aero Club as
VH-RVH and later as VH-BKA.