VH-UMF
Avro 618
Ten
(c/n 241)
The above nice image is from the
John Hopton collection. The Avro
Ten (8 passengers plus two
crew) was,
in fact, the Fokker F.VIIB/3m
built under license by
the A.V. Roe
concern. 14 were
built in all, five of which
were purchased by Charles Kingsford Smith
(later Sir) and Charles Ulm
to
inaugurate their "
Australian National Airways" in
1930.
These aircraft were:
VH-UMF c/n 241 "Southern Cloud"
VH-UMG 230 "Southern
Star"
VH-UMH 229 "Southern
Sky"
VH-UMI
231 "Southern Moon"
VH-UNA
388 "Southern Sun"
There was also another "true" Fokker
F.VIIa/3m registered to Australian National Airways Ltd at
the time, which was,
of course, probably the most famous historic Australian aircraft ever,
namely
Kingsford Smith's VH-USU
"Southern Cross"
The
Australian National Airways mentioned here, incidentally, was a
different company than the
airline later
to adopt that name in 1936. This ANA folded in mid-1931 following
the loss of the
aircraft
seen above, "Southern Cloud" (VH-UMF)
which crashed in the Toolong Mountain range
on March 21, 1931,
on a
flight from Sydney to Melbourne.
The photo below, from my own scrapbook,
shows Smithy (hand on hip) in front of -UMF with a
1928 Triumph Super Seven motor car. Kingsford Smith
dabbled, later, in the production of the
short-lived Southern Cross car, the brilliant adventurer having
designed the 65 bhp horizontally-
opposed
4-cylinder sv engine which went into these machines. (Less than a
dozen were built,
I
believe).