G-ABPI
Armstrong Whitworth A.W.15
Atalanta (c/n AW.740)
The Atalanta was developed for Imperial
Airways South African and Far Eastern routes. G-ABPI,
the prototype,
actually flew its first proving run from Croydon to Cologne via
Brussels on 26th
September
1932. It was badly damaged in a forced landing at Coventry on
20th October 1932,
whilst
undergoing modifications for tropical duties in the hands of the
manufacturer. The aircraft's
individual name
'Atalanta' was
transferred to the fourth aircraft, G-ABTI, (hoping nobody would
notice), and
G-ABPI was ultiimately renamed 'Arethusa'
after it was repaired, It was, for a while,
one of three
based at Johhanesburg's Rand Airport in Germiston. It was
transferred to the east
Asian services for
operation between Darwin and Karachi in 1933 and re-registered in India
as
VT-AEF.