VH-BKS de Havilland D.H.82A Tiger Moth
(c/n 83118)
This
historic image, from the files of the "West Australia" newspaper, and
presented here courtesy
of the Geoff
Goodall collection shows this Tiger spraying for mosquitos at the
Swanbourne Army
Camp, near
Perth on 24 January 1959 . Interestingly, Geoff advises that he
purchased this air-
craft himself
as a basket case after finding it in a backyard at Scarborough, WA in
1971 (see shot
below).
He then donated it to the (then embryo) Airforce Association Aviation
Museum at Bull
Creek who,
through their connections with the RAAF had it airlifted in a C-130 to
Tiger Moth
expert John
Boden in Adelaide who did considerable work on the fuselage.
After another airlift
back to Perth
it was finished up as an ag machine, a role, in fact, that it had
performed for its work-
ing life
as a civil machine. After many years at the RAAFA Museum it has
now been acquired by
the
Queensland Air Museum at Caloundra who have made assurances that it
will be kept as an
agricultural
machine and not dolled up in "warbird" paint. Hallelujah!
It did, of course, do its 'time"
from 1940 to
1945 although was never allocated a RAAF A17- number, serving instead
with its
RAF serial of
R5259. It was civilianized in 1947. Ian
McDonell provides the i,age at the foot
of the page showing it at the QAM with spray
gear.