VH-BNQ Auster J/4 Archer Special
(c/n 2361)
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What an abortion!
Here is VH-BNQ as an Auster J4 Archer at Bankstown circa April 1958,
in
a rare photo from the Jeff
Atkinson collection showing the short-lived experimental nosewheel
undercarriage. This
Auster had been built as a J2 Arrow (G-AIJU) with a 75 hp Continental
C-75
engine, imported by
Australian Auster agents Kingsford Smith Aviation Services and
assembled at
Bankstown in February 1950 for
sale to the Royal Queensland Aero Club, who had a number of
two-seat Arrows.
It crashed on takeoff at Mount Perry, Queensland on 26 March 1951 and
was
written off. The wreck was
repurchased by KSAS and stored. From the mid 1950s KSAS came
up with a variety of
modifications to improve basic Auster models in a vain attempt to keep
them
competitive with the new Cessnas
and Pipers being imported in increasing numbers. VH-BNQ
was rebuilt at
Bankstown as a J4 Archer with a 90 hp Cirrus Minor IIA engine and
fitted with an
experimental tricycle
undercarriage. It was test flown on 16 April 1958.
The experiment was
deemed unsuccessful (plus DCA
weren't too keen on giving it a full CofA) and -BNQ was con-
verted back to conventional
tailwheel undercarriage by July 1958, as seen in the image below from
the Geoff Goodall collection. As a J/4 it joined the
Kingsford Smith Flying Services training
fleet,
and was re-registered VH-KFF,
later VH-CGF. Then,
in 1992, it reverted back to VH-BNQ,
an
identity it still enjoys today.