VH-EDF
Auster J/5P
Autocar
(c/n 3191)
At around the time
of the 1969 BP England-Australia Air Race, Richard Rudd (a contributor
to
this
collection), an Adelaide aerial surveyor and photographer, was in the
U.K. to purchase an
aeroplane for a solo
flight back to Australia as a private venture to commemorate the 50th
Anni-
versary of the
Ross-Smith Vimy Flight of 1919. He acquired the Autocar
G-AOHF. This air-
craft had had a couple of stints abroad prior to that, having been
registered D-EFOR and EI-AJH,
before being restored to the UK register as
G-AOHF after both tenures. After an adventurous
trip wherein Richard at one point forced
landed in the desert 300 miles from Damascus due to fuel
problems* he arrived
in Adelaide on 25 January 1970. The number '50' on the tail was
not, there-
fore, an official race number, but
represented the 50 years since the original Vimy flight. I believe
that Richard was
entrusted with a bag of commemorative mail to carry on the trip.
VH-EDF has
been owned now for more than a decade by
Auscan Aviation Associates at Parafield Airport,
Adelaide. However, as of
early 2011 it is now under restoration (to be presented as it was when
it first arrived in Oz back in 1970) by Bruce
Ramsay of Gayndah, Queensland. The photo above,
circa 1970 is
from the Ian W. O'Neill collection, whilst the three shots immediately
below are from
Richard and show (upper) the Autocar at
Kidlington in 1966 as G-AOHF, (centre) refueling at
Singapore (note Royal Air Cambodge Caravelle
taxying in backgournd) and (lower) the inscription
carried on the
nose.
* Regarding this delay in
Syria, Richard reports: "The local Sheik's men escorted me to his tent.
As they had Sten guns and I
didn't, there really was no question of my not going!". In the
event
he was allowed to leave and
continued his trip undeterred. The last leg was made from
Oodnadatta
to
Parafield. Richard also reports that the painting of the '50' on
the tail helped on several occassions
when airport authorities assumed it was an official race number!