VH-UHP de Havilland D.H.60X Moth
(c/n 877)
Photos of -UHP have proven to be elusive. The above shot from
Phil Colbourn was in his
grandfather's album. His mum remembers it as having landed
at Coonable by Nancy Bird
Walton,
circa 1935.
This photo was taken circa 1935, indicating that stripes were prevalent
on Civil
Aviation (Dept of Defence) registered machines prior to the
introduction of the
commissioned "Royal" club status on 16 August 1937. -UHP
also appears in the shot I
used for
-UHS (below). The head-on one at the foot of the page came from
the Frank
Smith
collection. All were probably taken at Essendon..
-UHP had several
interesting accidents. On 29 July 1935 it was
involved in a mid-air
collision with
the
Moth VH-UAS resulting in a
broken propellor. In another
mid-air
collision on 2
February 1936 its top wing was severely damaged
when it collided with
VH-UII (another
Moth). Finally, on 5 June 1937 it collided with
yet another Moth,
VH-ULB (no
details on
this one). Despite its propensity for
banging into things
it was,
nevertheless, impressed into
RAAF service during WW II and was assigned
the
serial A7-100.
However, and
perhaps
fortunately for the local intake of student
pilots at
Essendon, it
was it was
reduced to produce a
couple of months afterwards
( in September 1940),