VH-BJQ
Avro 652A Anson 1
This Anson illustrates well the method in
which
registration letters were displayed in the 1940s and
early
1950s. Large and readily readable on the fuselage, and VH- on the
top of the port wing and
-BJQ on the
starboard. Under the mainplanes the reverse would have been
true,
with the letters
being readable
from left to right
whilst in flight. Around the middle of the 1950s this scheme was
changed
allowing the rego to be painted on the tail (in some cases so minuscule
they could not
be read
from 10 meters!) and, in some cases, the total elimination of the wing
markings. Worst
offender of this
"new" trend was the US airline TWA. I have stood virtually
under the tail of one
of their
Connies and could scarcely discern the registration number by looking
up at
it! The name
on the nose was
larger than the official number.
Anyway, back to -BJQ. The two
shots below are from the Geoff Goodall collection. The upper
one is a ropey old image
taken at Essendon (where, I suspect, my shot above was taken) in late
1948, with another Tradair
Anson behind. Note that Tradair Ansons had the pointed nose modi-
fication, replacing the
stock military nose. Underneath that is a shot of a happy bunch
of
Tradair
fitters/engineers at
Essendon, also circa 1948. The Anson had to have been -BJQ
since that was
the only Tradair one which
bore the company name above the cabin windows. These lads all
look
to have been in
their early twenties and had doubtless been recently demobbed.
That would put
them pushing 80 as
of now, (2007) although I'll just bet at least one of them is still
alive. Can anyone
help put names to
these faces? Incidentally VH-BJQ was withdrawn from
use in August 1951.
.