As an aside, I found a couple of interesting sites while researching all this. Here's a very interesting article on the Seafire. No author credited but it can only be by the great man himself, Eric "Winkle" Brown.
http://www.fiddlersgreen.net/aircraft/WWII/seafire/sea-info/sea_info.htmThis extract should amuse Ozzy.
The Seafire L Mk IIC was the most exciting aircraft that I had flown to that time. Its initial climb rate and acceleration were little short of magnificent, and at maximum boost it could maintain 4,600 ft/mm (23,36 m/sec) upto 6,000 ft (1 830 in).
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My enthusiasm for this new Seafire variant was such that, one afternoon, in sheer exhilaration, I looped it around both spans of the Forth Bridge in succession - court-martial stuff nowadays but during a war nobody has the time to bother with such formalities.
This comment made me wonder why RAF pilots would need to know how to trap on a carrier.

Between 29 December 1942 and 3 January 1943, I had had the task of giving Seafire deck landing instruction to No 65(F) "East India" Squadron, RAF
He mentions another incident very similar to the one with AB910.
It was about this time that I witnessed a very unusual incident at Machrihanish when the airfield was alerted that a Seafire being flown by Lt David Wilkinson (later to be killed in a flying accident) had a mechanic wrapped around its rear end! The mechanic, a rating appropriately enough named Overhead, had apparently been lying on the tail of the Seafire to hold it down while running up on the deck of a carrier in the Clyde area. Wilkinson had throttled back to let the mechanic off, but due to a misunderstanding, the mechanic had remained where he was and the Seafire had taken-off with him clinging on for dear life. The pilot could not account for the extraordinary tail-heaviness of his Seafire until he was alerted by radio of the situation. He promptly headed for Machrihanish at low level and slow cruise, the slipstream clamping the unfortunate mechanic in position. A straight-in approach to the runway and a wheeler landing to keep the tail up as long as possible, and the mechanic's ordeal was over - he suffered shock and the effects of cold, but was otherwise totally unhurt.
I also found this which seem to confirm that the Operation Dragoon aircraft had invasion stripes.
http://www.usaaftroopcarrier.com/Historical%20Overview.htmIn an effort to prevent the "friendly fire" that downed so many TC aircraft in Sicily, USAAF and British aircraft were painted with large, easily recognizable black and white "invasion stripes" on their fuselages and wings. Nevertheless, navy gunners shot down six British troop carrier aircraft flying in a 50-ship serial on 7 June, as the final glider serials of NEPTUNE flew to their LZs.