VH-FBC (3) DHA-3 Drover 3A
(c/n 5019)
This was actually the last production Drover
completed. C/n 5020 was removed from the production
line and its completion
accelerated so that it could become the developmental aircraft to solve
engine/
propellor
coordination problems. 5019 went to the NSW section of the
Royal Flying Doctor Service
as VH-FDA
in July 1956.
In 1959 the RFDS had a couple of their Drovers converted to take
three
180 hp Lycoming engines in lieu of the
original 145 hp D.H Gipsys. VH-FDA was the developmental
aircraft.
After the engine re-fit it became known as the Mark 3. Two
years later another modification
extended the
horizontal stablizer and elevators by some 24 inches, and increased the
dihedral 7 degrees
(producing the somewhat
"funny" look in the image above) and resulting in the designation Mark
3A.
VH-FDA was sold by the RFDS
in 1967 to Beagle Aircraft Sales (Australasia) as VH-UNK. After a
scant two months it was
sold on to Hazair Sales as VH-UMA.
In 1970 it went to New
Zealand as
ZK-DDD registered to the
Mercury Bay Aero Club. It later (1983) went to Great Barrier
Airlines.
In 1988 it was purchased
by Robert Youl, CEO of Cavalier Colours Pty Ltd of Mordialloc, Victoria
registered VH-FBC, and
flown in the Bicentennial Air Race around Australia. Barry
Maclean saw it
around that time at
Laverton, Victoria (October 1988) and took the above image. ("Cavalier Colours"
can be seen on the
bar across the fin and rudder on the original print
). In 1993 this Drover was pur-
chased by the
Powerhouse Museum in Sydney and is exhibited there today.