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Hi Antoni
Did AZ's researcher do any better with the other two pilots?
All the best
Rowan
Option 1 is rather an obscure Hurricane to choose. Perhaps the link with Frantisek is the motive. May have come from Polish Wings 4 where there is a photograph of it. Well it’s more of a ground crew team photo. All you can tell about the hurricane is that is had a prop with three blades and the old style pole type aerial mast. Perhaps the idea that it had fabric wings stems from this and the serial number. That is, it was an early production machine. Production of metal wings was stepped up in September 1939, the last fabric wing Hurricane left Brooklands March 1940. Almost immediately they started cannibalising older machines and fitting metal wings so I am sceptical, even if it was manufactured with fabric wings,it still had them in November 1940
Options 2 and 3 look like they come from an Osprey publication but they don’t seem to have taken note of what is said in the text. They are both genuine fabric winged examples but I have some issues with option 3 and the date.
Option 2. There are a couple of photos of L1679, one dated October 1939, and the profile from the kit matches them. Aircraft of the British Expeditionary Force had the serials removed and roundels under the wings ere ordered from December 1939, I think. Red, White and Blue stripes were painted on the rudder to make them look similar to French aircraft. So it’s pretty much what you would expect it to look like in late 1939 early 1940.
It appears in On Target Profile 12 Hawker Hurricane in RAF and Commonwealth Service, as it looked in May 1940 during the battle of France. They give the serial number as L1697 but it is clear from the text that it is the same Hurricane. The squadron codes have been painted over but can still been seen as a shadow under the paint. The undersides have been painted over with an “unspecified pale blue” but again the original paint could be seen underneath. They say that originally the rear fuselage and nose undersides and undersides of the tail planes were painted aluminium but don’t explain what they mean by originally. Perhaps when it left the factory as in the photographstaken in 1939 the undersides of the nose are black and white. The reference they give is private sources so no idea if this is based on photographs or written or verbal accounts.
Run out of time tonight will deal with option 3 tomorrow.