VH-UMC de Havilland D.H.50
(c/n 74)
The above shot, from the Frank Walters
collection (via Geoff Goodall) shows this D.H.50 at
Perth in 1929.
The image immediately below is from the Civil Aviation
Historical Society
archives and shows the aircraft as Alan Cobham's
famous DH.50 G-EBFO over
Cloncurry,
Queensland
probably in 1926 when it was being flown on
his round trip from England to
Australia whilst on a proving flight for
Imperial Airways. Two years
later Norman Brearley
of
West Australian Airways saw it languishing in
bits and pieces in a
hangar at Stag Lane and
had it shipped to Perth where he completed its
rebuild as VH-UMC complete with a 300 hp
ADC Nimbus engine replacing the original
Armstrong Siddeley Jaguar. The third photo is from
the Ted Fletcher
collection, and shows it shortly
after its rebuild in October 1929 on its
nose at
Forrest, WA. when being flown by WAA pilot Bert Heath in the
East-West Centenary Air Race
from
Sydney to Perth. (WAA staff had jokingly made up the slogan
"Verily Heath U Must
Crash").
At the
foot of the page is an image culled from the
Brisbane Courier of 1 October 1929 showing
the D.H.50 just
before the race. Anyway, inbound to
Forrest from Ceduna and Cook, while in
a low altitude
duel with a Moth,
Heath's undercarriage struck a rock resulting in this arrival at
Forrest. The aircraft was
repaired overnight at Forrest, using the undercarriage borrowed from
the
Civil Aviation Board's DH.50
which was accompanying the race, and Heath continued to
Perth
the
following day to take line
honors as first across the finishing line at Ascot Racecourse at
3.02 pm.
VH-UMC was to crash again at Mia Mia
Station
between Carnarvon and Onslow, WA
on
1 March 1934, and six
months later its CofA expired and it was officially written off.