VH-REK Cessna 310B
(c/n 35583)
The
Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation
(Division of Radio Physics), purchased
two Cessna 310Bs (VH-REK
and VH-REL) in November 1957, to investigate cloud-seeding/rain making
experiments. The two machines departed San Francisco in formation
on 21 November 1957 and were the
first American light
aircraft to make the delivery flight across the Pacific.
Both
Cessnas spent five days in
New Plymouth, New
Zealand, where they were modified to withstand stress forces of 5G
plus They arrived
(amid some fanfare) in
Sydney on 5 December 1957. Greg Banfield's shot above
was taken at Mascot in
June 1964. The Avia
Rent-A-Plane Aero Commander is VH-AVT whilst the Dove is VH-DSM.
Over
the years I have amassed a fair collection of picrures of this
Cessna. Immediately beliw is a Richard Maclean
shot taken at Essendon in
1959. The silver
iodide burners fitted by Cessna distributor Rex Aviation at Banks-
town
were manufactured in the Radiophysics
workshops at Sydney University. Research
Air was a Rex
Aviation subsidiary set up
specifically to
operate these aircraft on behalf of the CSIRO. VH-REK, which had
been registered N5383A in
the US, is now
preserved by the Historical Aircraft Restoration Society Inc in
Castle
Hill, NSW. Geoff Goodall saw it a couple of
times after it left Rex Aviation, in May 1967. Shot # 3
was at Jandakot, in December 1969 in a new paint
scheme, then with WA Cessna dealers Simpson Aviation,
who sold it that same month
to Trans West Air
Charter of Perth, and (photo # 4), again at Jandakot in March
1973 with
Trans West.
By 1985 it was back in Bankstown and Greg Bafield provides image # 5
showing it
it in a particularly gaudy
paint job, VH-REK is now owned by the Historical Aircraft
Restoration
Society Inc
and the aircraft is based at the
HARS facility at
Albion Park (Wollongong) Airport, NSW. The 55-year-old
bird is
maintained in full flying condition and still takes
to the air fairly regularly. The contemporary photo of it
at the
foot of the page (# 6) was taken in 2011 by Phil Vabre.
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