I look forward to getting my own photos during this year's display season.

expat wrote:Dam they put the ugly Mk1 nose back on her![]()
At the risk of being picky, she is not actually a Blenheim, but a Bollingbrook. I worked on her back in the early 90's before the second crash (I also flew in her once too....got the pictures to prove it as well)
ARC had the Mk1 nose in storage and John Romain was toying with the idea of a nose change way back then. Can't say I like the decision, but if it means we have something unusual in the air to attract the crowds, then so be it. Still, as we use to say, happiness is a nice pair of Bristols......![]()
Matt
ozzy72 wrote:She's still ugly, but it'll be nice to see her flying again!
expat wrote:It does not matter how may bits it was built from, the only thing that matters is the ID plate that they built it under. If that came form a Blenheim Fuselarge, she is a Blenheim, if it was a Bollinbrook Fuselage then she is a Bollinbrook regardless of what people want to call her.....That is why, when a total wreak is dug out of the ground, the most important thing is to find the ID plate. Without that the aircraft is only a replica when it takes to the skies again.
Matt
C wrote:expat wrote:It does not matter how may bits it was built from, the only thing that matters is the ID plate that they built it under. If that came form a Blenheim Fuselarge, she is a Blenheim, if it was a Bollinbrook Fuselage then she is a Bollinbrook regardless of what people want to call her.....That is why, when a total wreak is dug out of the ground, the most important thing is to find the ID plate. Without that the aircraft is only a replica when it takes to the skies again.
Matt
Hence technically it's a completely different airframe to that which crashed in 2003!
C wrote:It's now flying as L6739, which is the Mk 1 nose's identity...
...so the aircraft that had the little whoopsy (ie, pretty much everything aft of the cockpit) is no longer the aircraft that had the whoopsy.![]()
It's still G-BPIV though.
C wrote:I think the closest comparison would be sticking a Lusinov nose on a DC-3 and calling it the former! Mind you, it's far better (and cheaper) than most of the Spitfires that have appeared out of Duxford in the past 10 years, which really are dataplate restorations*.
*for the uninitiated, effectively new build airframes with an historic identity.
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