VH-UEQ ANEC
I
( no
c/n allotted)
The ANEC I was designed by W.S. Shackleton in
the U.K. under the rules of the Lympne light air-
craft trials conducted in
1923. Engine capacity had to
be less than 750 cc, and the ANEC was.
fitted with a 696 cc Blackburn Tomtit engine,
developing some 22 hp. The ANEC I, along with the
slightly
enlarged ANEC II, were among the first ultralight aircraft ever
designed. G-EBHR was pur-
chased in August 1924 by Perth brewery owner A.G. Simpson who operated
as Air Transport Ltd
and it was
registered G-AUEQ upon arrival in Australia.
The rare shot above, from the Frank
Colquhoun
collection shows it at the old Maylands Airport in 1929 soon after its
rego had been
changed
to VH-UEQ. Simpson flew it out of that locale
until about 1932 when it was acquired by
Clarrie Fitzgerald, a flying enthusiast from Goomalling, WA. This
individual also built a Luton Minor.
Anyway,
his plan was to fit -UEQ with floats and use it as a hydroplane on a
nearby lake. Just how
far he got
with that project is not recorded, but -UEQ's Tomtit engine was later
used in a Flying Flea
when
it was test flown at West Subiaco aerodrome in Perth later in 1936.