VH-KKO Piper PA-22 Tri-Pacer 150
(c/n 22-878)
The shot of VH-KKO above was taken by
Geoff Goodall at Jandakot, Perth in November 1969,
soon after the
aircraft had been re-assembled after having been shipped from Kenya,
It is an early
1952
model originally delivered as VP-KKU. Upon that colony gaining
independence (i.e. when it
became a
TPLAC) the Tri-Pacer was
re-registered 5Y-KKU. I have spent years endeavoring to
find out just who, in ICAO (I
mean there had to be one specific bloke), decided to give the "emerging
nations" alphanumeric prefixes. Totally
unnecessary,
since there were plenty of all-letter combos
available. I mean, Kenya could quite easily have been given
KY-. Why 5Y-? That plus the fact
that one would think there'd be some sort of
system. e.g. all Asia to be "4x"; Africa to be "5x", etc.
. Not
so. There appears to be no rhyme nor reason........ The
mysterious "they" again. Anyway, this
Tri-Pacer had
been uncrated at Jandakot in February 1969 after being imported by its
previous
owner in Africa, Erik Hovmand, who had migrated to Western
Australia (don't blame him). How-
ever, he
faced faced a certification delay because it was described as a
PA-22-135, which did not
fit DCA's
approved PA-22 type designations. (I don't know why, since
all early Tri-Pacers were
35s).
Consequently, as a result VH-KKO was not added to the register
until May 1970 by which
time it
had been re-engined to become a PA-22 Tri-Pacer 150.
It is still flying and Martyn
Covey took the shot
below at a Fly-In at Boort, Victoria in May 2008.
Today it not only looks very attractive in its white and mustard
finish, but
also appears to be in
pristine
condition. (Even the seam line on the tent matches).