Has anyone got the text or a photo of the legend on the brass plate fixed to the starboard engine cowling on early Mk 1 Spits . The plate is just to the rear of the engine hand crank aperture. This plate can be seen on X4590 in the Battle of Britain Hall at Hendon. I think it says something about using a safety rope when hand cranking. I wish I had photographed it during my visit last year to Hendon, but the light is very poor in the BOB hall
So could Spits start their eninges all on their own?
Hagar ,
Thank you very much for turning this up. It has been bugging me for ages.
I think that this hand crank mechanism was used mainly in practice for turning the engine over during maintenance etc as trolley accs appear very frequently in photos, both with and without the charger motor and dynamo. Indeed several photos show the use of just a large "Dagnite" battery or accumalator on it's own , without the wheels or charging system.)
I think that the substitution of the electric start system for the Coffman cartridge system was one of the features of most of the Castle Bromwich manufactured Mk 2 s but never mk 1s . A bulge on the cowling betrays the existence of the Coffman device.
The legend on this plate I think appears quite quaint to modern eyes. I think that it was probably fitted by Vickers to early Spits at the behest of the Air Ministry as it does not seem to be present on the prototype or on later Marks ( perhaps as the result of an accident?)
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