VH-UAO D.H.60G
Moth
(c/n 613)
Here's an old-timer
which is still on the current Australian register. It was
originally built as a D.H.60X
Moth for the RAAF and delivered in 1928 as
A7-9. When newer machines began to arrive, the Moth
was released for civilian
use and was one of the aircraft reconditioned for loan by the Civil
Aviation
Branch sponsored Aero Club movement. Assigned VH-UAO, it
went to the West Australian Section
at Maylands Aerodrome in
Perth. It suffered the usual amount of prangs
associated with Aero Club
use* and
in 1936, during a rebuild, was converted to the then standard of RAAF
machines by swapping
out the 80 h.p. Cirrus Mk II
engine with a D.H. Gipsy Mk I., thus making it a D.H.60G. A
year later
the Royal Aero Club of WA was born out of the Aero Club movement and
VH-UAO was assimilated
into the fleet. When WW II broke out it was
again impressed into RAAF service and given the serial
A7-92 (the only Moth to assume two RAAF
serials?). Demobbed again in 1945, it was sold for a
hundred quid to J K Vine of Vine Motors, Perth and
then on-sold, being restored to the civil Register
as VH-UAO on 26 March 1946 to John Lane of Kalgoorlie. The photo above
from the Geoff Goodall
collection shows shows VH-UAO in its post-War guise
at Maylands c.1960, whereas the NLA image
below is from its earlier
period seen flying over the Swan River at Perth in 1932, piloted by
early West-
ern Australian Airways pilot Val
Abbott. The Moth is still current and is now restored
all decked out
in RAAF uniform as seen
at:
http://www.adf-gallery.com.au/gallery/DH60-A7-9/GPH_2A7_9
For
a rare shot of it as A7-92 go the the CAHS page at:
http://www.airwaysmuseum.com/DH60%20VH-UAO.htm
* Here's one of them when
it crashed on 30 August 1932 into a foot of water in the Swan
River. It was
being flown by a young pupil and an instructor from the WA Branch of
the Australian Aero Club. Note
common practive then of painting the rego
right over the ailerons.
Photo
extracted from the West Australian of 31 August 1932.
* ............ and
another one, also into the Swan River. Again from the West
Australian, this time for
5 March 1935: